Judge Garland not interested in FBI job:
sources
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[May 17, 2017]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. appeals
court judge Merrick Garland, turned away by the Senate last year for a
Supreme Court post, is not interested in serving as FBI director, two
sources said on Tuesday, even as the top Senate Republican recommended
him for the job.
Garland, the chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia Circuit, has told people around him he "loves his job and is
not interested in leaving the judiciary," said one of the sources
familiar with the judge's thinking. The two sources spoke on condition
of anonymity.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said he has mentioned Garland to
Republican President Donald Trump as a possible successor James Comey,
who Trump fired last week as FBI chief. In an interview on Bloomberg
Television, McConnell referred to Garland, a former federal prosecutor,
as "an apolitical professional" to head the Federal Bureau of
Investigation.
Under McConnell's leadership, the Senate last year refused to consider
centrist Garland for a lifetime job as a Supreme Court justice after
Democratic President Barack Obama nominated him in March 2016. In doing
so, McConnell was able to allow Trump, who took office in January, to
nominate Neil Gorsuch to fill the seat, restoring the Supreme Court's
conservative majority.
Garland, 64, has been praised by both Democrats and Republicans in his
two decades on the appeals court. His appointment there is a lifetime
one, and if he took on a 10-year term at the FBI it would open up
another top judicial seat for Trump to fill.
Trump fired Comey during an FBI investigation into possible collusion
between Trump's 2016 presidential campaign and Russia.
Comey's replacement would need to be someone with a deep background in
law enforcement and no history of political involvement, McConnell said.
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Appeals Court Judge Merrick Garland speaks in the Rose Garden of the
White House in Washington, U.S., in this file photo dated March 16,
2016. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
Garland "is an example of that," McConnell added. "It would serve
the country well and lead to, I think, a more bipartisan approach."
Democrats have threatened to hold up a vote on a new FBI director
until a special prosecutor is named to investigate the potential
ties between Trump's campaign and Russia.
At least 11 people have been under consideration for the FBI top
job.
As a senior Justice Department official under Democratic President
Bill Clinton in the 1990s, Garland oversaw the prosecution of
Timothy McVeigh, the man who bombed the federal building in Oklahoma
City in 1995, killing 168 people.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley, Susan Heavey and Julia Edwards
Ainsley; Editing by Frances Kerry and Will Dunham)
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