J.D. Vance Comes Home to the Marine Corps
Democrat Nazis
Sacre Bleu! Thieves Swipe Napoleonic Jewels From the Louvre In Less Than Four...
Zohran Mamdani's Chief of Staff Confirms He Hates the NYPD
And What Didn't Happen in Gaza
'No Kings' for Thee, but Not for Me
Is Ron DeSantis Right About Property Taxes?
How Would the Founding Fathers Vote?
President Trump Needs Much Better Protection
Jury Convicts Conservative Attorney After Judge Refuses to Allow His Evidence and Witnesse...
Trump Says He Will Use 'Schumer Shutdown' To Permanently Cut Programs
FBI Pittsburgh Arrested 19 Violent Fugitives
VP Vance Rallies Marines While Old Liberals Jeer Trump
'Kings Get Guillotines': Leftists Show Out Threatening Trump
Ohio Man Faces Up to 20 Years in Federal Prison if Convicted for...
Tipsheet

Whatever Happened to Not Politicizing the Justice Department?

A controversy is beginning to swirl around the nomination of Timothy Purdon for U.S. Attorney for the District of North Dakota.

Purdon, whose legal experience is primarily as a defense attorney, is perhaps better known for his political activities.  According to the Los Angeles Times blog:
Advertisement


Purdon is a prominent Democratic donor and fundraiser, a national committeeman and was state chairman for the aborted presidential campaign of John Edwards, another trial lawyer.

Burton ran the Edwards campaign in North Dakota since 2004.  He has reportedly donated $12,400 to North Dakota Democrats, national politicians, and PACs since 2000.  In 2008, he donated $2,300 to then-candidate Obama.  He has also held several positions within the Democratic Party infrastructure over the years, including Committeeman in the Democratic National Committee from 2008 up through his nomination, and Delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 2000.

Bill Brudvik, whose name was also submitted to the President for consideration, commented, "When President Obama said he wanted to restore the independence and dignity of the U.S. Attorney's office, in light of the Alberto Gonzales fiasco, and then appoints a political activist and party fundraiser, it seems a little to me like 'politics as usual' than 'change we can believe in.'"

So, North Dakota may soon have a political operative with little to no experience as a prosecutor for its U.S. attorney.  I wonder how they feel about that?

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement