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Garland decries House GOP proposal to cut Justice Dept. funding by $1 billion

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
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Attorney General Merrick Garland on Tuesday decried a proposal from House Republicans to slash the Justice Department’s budget by nearly $1 billion for next year, saying such cuts would risk undermining progress in reducing violent crime nationwide.

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“This effort … is unacceptable,” Garland said at a news conference in Cleveland, where he traveled to mark the opening of a new intelligence center to help state and federal prosecutors combat gun violence.

Garland’s remarks came hours after the House GOP unveiled a fiscal 2025 budget proposal that would set Justice’s funding at $36.5 billion, about $3 billion less than the amount President Biden is seeking. Some conservatives have targeted the Justice Department for cuts as part of their opposition to the criminal prosecutions of former president Donald Trump.


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Trump was convicted last month on 34 felony New York state counts of falsifying business records. He faces state charges in Georgia for election interference and federal charges in Washington for election interference and in Florida for illegally retaining classified documents. Garland has appointed Jack Smith as special counsel to oversee the federal cases.
Trump has pleaded not guilty in all of his indictments. He and his Republican allies have sought to paint the prosecutions as politically motivated, accusing the Justice Department and Democrats of targeting the former president. Trump is the presumptive Republican presidential nominee to face Biden in the November election.
House Republicans voted this month to hold Garland in contempt over his refusal to turn over audiotapes of special counsel Robert K. Hur’s interview with Biden during an investigation last year into the president’s handling of classified documents. Biden exerted executive privilege to shield the tapes after Garland said their public disclosure could hamper the Justice Department’s ability to conduct future investigations.



Garland has lashed out at what he says are baseless attacks and conspiracies from Republicans that have threatened to undermine the rule of law. “I will not be intimidated,” he said this month.

A House Appropriations subcommittee is scheduled to hold a markup hearing on the GOP’s budget proposal Wednesday.
“This bill prioritizes fiscal sanity and the liberties of the American people,” Committee Chairman Tom Cole (R-Okla.) said in a statement. “It halts the weaponization of the federal government against its citizens and enhances congressional oversight to ensure taxpayer dollars are used responsibly.”
In Cleveland, Garland and Steve Dettelbach, director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, hailed progress in combating violent crime, which fell nationwide by 6 percent in 2023, according to FBI data. Murders, which had spiked in many cities during and after the coronavirus pandemic, dropped 13 percent last year, one of the steepest annual declines, officials said.



Dettelbach cited a $50 million cut to ATF’s budget last year and said the new House GOP proposal would “impose even deeper cuts.”
Such budget reductions would mean “an inability to open other centers like this,” Dettelbach said of the intelligence center, which aims to use technology and federal tracking systems to pursue investigations into gun crimes in the Northeast Ohio region.
“It will threaten the closing of facilities like this,” he said, “and mean leaving our communities less protected and, thus, less safe.”

 
Attorney General Merrick Garland on Tuesday decried a proposal from House Republicans to slash the Justice Department’s budget by nearly $1 billion for next year, saying such cuts would risk undermining progress in reducing violent crime nationwide.

Sign up for Fact Checker, our weekly review of what's true, false or in-between in politics.

“This effort … is unacceptable,” Garland said at a news conference in Cleveland, where he traveled to mark the opening of a new intelligence center to help state and federal prosecutors combat gun violence.

Garland’s remarks came hours after the House GOP unveiled a fiscal 2025 budget proposal that would set Justice’s funding at $36.5 billion, about $3 billion less than the amount President Biden is seeking. Some conservatives have targeted the Justice Department for cuts as part of their opposition to the criminal prosecutions of former president Donald Trump.


ADVERTISING


Trump was convicted last month on 34 felony New York state counts of falsifying business records. He faces state charges in Georgia for election interference and federal charges in Washington for election interference and in Florida for illegally retaining classified documents. Garland has appointed Jack Smith as special counsel to oversee the federal cases.
Trump has pleaded not guilty in all of his indictments. He and his Republican allies have sought to paint the prosecutions as politically motivated, accusing the Justice Department and Democrats of targeting the former president. Trump is the presumptive Republican presidential nominee to face Biden in the November election.
House Republicans voted this month to hold Garland in contempt over his refusal to turn over audiotapes of special counsel Robert K. Hur’s interview with Biden during an investigation last year into the president’s handling of classified documents. Biden exerted executive privilege to shield the tapes after Garland said their public disclosure could hamper the Justice Department’s ability to conduct future investigations.



Garland has lashed out at what he says are baseless attacks and conspiracies from Republicans that have threatened to undermine the rule of law. “I will not be intimidated,” he said this month.

A House Appropriations subcommittee is scheduled to hold a markup hearing on the GOP’s budget proposal Wednesday.
“This bill prioritizes fiscal sanity and the liberties of the American people,” Committee Chairman Tom Cole (R-Okla.) said in a statement. “It halts the weaponization of the federal government against its citizens and enhances congressional oversight to ensure taxpayer dollars are used responsibly.”
In Cleveland, Garland and Steve Dettelbach, director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, hailed progress in combating violent crime, which fell nationwide by 6 percent in 2023, according to FBI data. Murders, which had spiked in many cities during and after the coronavirus pandemic, dropped 13 percent last year, one of the steepest annual declines, officials said.



Dettelbach cited a $50 million cut to ATF’s budget last year and said the new House GOP proposal would “impose even deeper cuts.”
Such budget reductions would mean “an inability to open other centers like this,” Dettelbach said of the intelligence center, which aims to use technology and federal tracking systems to pursue investigations into gun crimes in the Northeast Ohio region.
“It will threaten the closing of facilities like this,” he said, “and mean leaving our communities less protected and, thus, less safe.”

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Is this actual cuts or a reduction in the increase of spending from last year's budget to the proposed budget for next year. Baseline budgeting.

In every budget there is an increase in spending for next year for every program that is in the budget. Baseline budgeting.

The percentage of increase varies from program to program. It is not a straight across the board increase. When there is a proposal to reduce that increase it is called a cut by the MSM and politicians, when it is not actually a cut. It is just a reduction in the rate of increase.

This fight has been going on long before most of you were born. It is sad that we are not told the whole story.
 
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Attorney General Merrick Garland on Tuesday decried a proposal from House Republicans to slash the Justice Department’s budget by nearly $1 billion for next year, saying such cuts would risk undermining progress in reducing violent crime nationwide.

Sign up for Fact Checker, our weekly review of what's true, false or in-between in politics.

“This effort … is unacceptable,” Garland said at a news conference in Cleveland, where he traveled to mark the opening of a new intelligence center to help state and federal prosecutors combat gun violence.

Garland’s remarks came hours after the House GOP unveiled a fiscal 2025 budget proposal that would set Justice’s funding at $36.5 billion, about $3 billion less than the amount President Biden is seeking. Some conservatives have targeted the Justice Department for cuts as part of their opposition to the criminal prosecutions of former president Donald Trump.


ADVERTISING


Trump was convicted last month on 34 felony New York state counts of falsifying business records. He faces state charges in Georgia for election interference and federal charges in Washington for election interference and in Florida for illegally retaining classified documents. Garland has appointed Jack Smith as special counsel to oversee the federal cases.
Trump has pleaded not guilty in all of his indictments. He and his Republican allies have sought to paint the prosecutions as politically motivated, accusing the Justice Department and Democrats of targeting the former president. Trump is the presumptive Republican presidential nominee to face Biden in the November election.
House Republicans voted this month to hold Garland in contempt over his refusal to turn over audiotapes of special counsel Robert K. Hur’s interview with Biden during an investigation last year into the president’s handling of classified documents. Biden exerted executive privilege to shield the tapes after Garland said their public disclosure could hamper the Justice Department’s ability to conduct future investigations.



Garland has lashed out at what he says are baseless attacks and conspiracies from Republicans that have threatened to undermine the rule of law. “I will not be intimidated,” he said this month.

A House Appropriations subcommittee is scheduled to hold a markup hearing on the GOP’s budget proposal Wednesday.
“This bill prioritizes fiscal sanity and the liberties of the American people,” Committee Chairman Tom Cole (R-Okla.) said in a statement. “It halts the weaponization of the federal government against its citizens and enhances congressional oversight to ensure taxpayer dollars are used responsibly.”
In Cleveland, Garland and Steve Dettelbach, director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, hailed progress in combating violent crime, which fell nationwide by 6 percent in 2023, according to FBI data. Murders, which had spiked in many cities during and after the coronavirus pandemic, dropped 13 percent last year, one of the steepest annual declines, officials said.



Dettelbach cited a $50 million cut to ATF’s budget last year and said the new House GOP proposal would “impose even deeper cuts.”
Such budget reductions would mean “an inability to open other centers like this,” Dettelbach said of the intelligence center, which aims to use technology and federal tracking systems to pursue investigations into gun crimes in the Northeast Ohio region.
“It will threaten the closing of facilities like this,” he said, “and mean leaving our communities less protected and, thus, less safe.”

Garland is a pussy and Branstad's cousin.
 
Is this actual cuts or a reduction in the increase of spending from last year's budget to the proposed budget for next year. Baseline budgeting.

In every budget there is an increase in spending for next year for every program that is in the budget. Baseline budgeting.

The percentage of increase varies from program to program. It is not a straight across the board increase. When there is a proposal to reduce that increase it is called a cut by the MSM and politicians, when it is not actually a cut. It is just a reduction in the rate of increase.

This fight has been going on long before most of you were born. It is sad that we are not told the whole story.
Of course you aren’t because this board is FULL of lefties who are agenda driven DNC types not motivated to tell the complete facts.
 
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The House already wants to cut the FBI's budget, at a time when we have heightened terrorist activity/threats.

Totally makes sense.
FBI is busy debunking the facts about Hunter’s laptop. Who has time for terrorists? Oh…yeah…the NSA who knows EVERYTHING.
 
FBI is busy debunking the facts about Hunter’s laptop. Who has time for terrorists? Oh…yeah…the NSA who knows EVERYTHING.
Wrong again!

What is the FBI’s role in combating terrorism?​

The FBI is the nation’s lead federal law enforcement agency for investigating and preventing acts of domestic and international terrorism. It is the lead federal agency for investigating attacks involving weapons of mass destruction—those involving chemical, radiological, or biological agents or nuclear weapons. The FBI is also responsible for specific terrorism-related offenses, such as violence at airports, money laundering, attacks on U.S. officials, and others. The FBI also works closely with the Director of National Intelligence and other U.S. intelligence agencies to gather and analyze intelligence on terrorism and other security threats. It is the number one priority of the FBI to protect the U.S. and U.S. persons and interests around the world from terrorist attack.

https://www.fbi.gov/about/faqs/what-is-the-fbis-role-in-combating-terrorism#:~:text=The%20FBI%20is%20the%20nation's,biological%20agents%20or%20nuclear%20weapons.
 
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I'm all for cutting expenses, but I wouldn't start with the police.

  • Farm Credit Administration
  • US office of Personnel Management
  • NASA
  • US Department of Commerce

Just to name a few.
 
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Attorney General Merrick Garland on Tuesday decried a proposal from House Republicans to slash the Justice Department’s budget by nearly $1 billion for next year, saying such cuts would risk undermining progress in reducing violent crime nationwide.

Sign up for Fact Checker, our weekly review of what's true, false or in-between in politics.

“This effort … is unacceptable,” Garland said at a news conference in Cleveland, where he traveled to mark the opening of a new intelligence center to help state and federal prosecutors combat gun violence.

Garland’s remarks came hours after the House GOP unveiled a fiscal 2025 budget proposal that would set Justice’s funding at $36.5 billion, about $3 billion less than the amount President Biden is seeking. Some conservatives have targeted the Justice Department for cuts as part of their opposition to the criminal prosecutions of former president Donald Trump.


ADVERTISING


Trump was convicted last month on 34 felony New York state counts of falsifying business records. He faces state charges in Georgia for election interference and federal charges in Washington for election interference and in Florida for illegally retaining classified documents. Garland has appointed Jack Smith as special counsel to oversee the federal cases.
Trump has pleaded not guilty in all of his indictments. He and his Republican allies have sought to paint the prosecutions as politically motivated, accusing the Justice Department and Democrats of targeting the former president. Trump is the presumptive Republican presidential nominee to face Biden in the November election.
House Republicans voted this month to hold Garland in contempt over his refusal to turn over audiotapes of special counsel Robert K. Hur’s interview with Biden during an investigation last year into the president’s handling of classified documents. Biden exerted executive privilege to shield the tapes after Garland said their public disclosure could hamper the Justice Department’s ability to conduct future investigations.



Garland has lashed out at what he says are baseless attacks and conspiracies from Republicans that have threatened to undermine the rule of law. “I will not be intimidated,” he said this month.

A House Appropriations subcommittee is scheduled to hold a markup hearing on the GOP’s budget proposal Wednesday.
“This bill prioritizes fiscal sanity and the liberties of the American people,” Committee Chairman Tom Cole (R-Okla.) said in a statement. “It halts the weaponization of the federal government against its citizens and enhances congressional oversight to ensure taxpayer dollars are used responsibly.”
In Cleveland, Garland and Steve Dettelbach, director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, hailed progress in combating violent crime, which fell nationwide by 6 percent in 2023, according to FBI data. Murders, which had spiked in many cities during and after the coronavirus pandemic, dropped 13 percent last year, one of the steepest annual declines, officials said.



Dettelbach cited a $50 million cut to ATF’s budget last year and said the new House GOP proposal would “impose even deeper cuts.”
Such budget reductions would mean “an inability to open other centers like this,” Dettelbach said of the intelligence center, which aims to use technology and federal tracking systems to pursue investigations into gun crimes in the Northeast Ohio region.
“It will threaten the closing of facilities like this,” he said, “and mean leaving our communities less protected and, thus, less safe.”



Party Of Law And Order doesn't seem to want to fund Law And Order....
 
I fully support this cut with the condition that a portion be distributed back to the states for local, county and state law enforcement agencies.
 
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Party Of Law And Order doesn't seem to want to fund Law And Order....
The thing is, like all government there is waste, redundancy and inefficiency that can be dealt with to save a bunch of money. The problem is there is no such thing as negotiating in politics at the moment.

Loping off a hand to cure a headache is an illogical approach and a clear sign of lack of seriousness.
 
The thing is, like all government there is waste, redundancy and inefficiency that can be dealt with to save a bunch of money. The problem is there is no such thing as negotiating in politics at the moment.

Loping off a hand to cure a headache is an illogical approach and a clear sign of lack of seriousness.

More like lopping off your penis to cure your herpes and genital warts.

They're cured, all right...
 
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