[Senate Hearing 109-205] [From the U.S. Government Printing Office] S. Hrg. 109-205 CONFIRMATION HEARING ON THE NOMINATIONS OF RACHEL L. BRAND, ALICE S. FISHER, AND REGINA B. SCHOFIELD TO BE ASSISTANT ATTORNEYS GENERAL ======================================================================= HEARING before the COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY UNITED STATES SENATE ONE HUNDRED NINTH CONGRESS FIRST SESSION __________ MAY 12, 2005 __________ Serial No. J-109-19 __________ Printed for the use of the Committee on the Judiciary U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 22-785 WASHINGTON : 2005 _____________________________________________________________________________ For Sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Internet: bookstore.gpo.gov Phone: toll free (866) 512-1800; (202) 512�091800 Fax: (202) 512�092250 Mail: Stop SSOP, Washington, DC 20402�090001 COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY ARLEN SPECTER, Pennsylvania, Chairman ORRIN G. HATCH, Utah PATRICK J. LEAHY, Vermont CHARLES E. GRASSLEY, Iowa EDWARD M. KENNEDY, Massachusetts JON KYL, Arizona JOSEPH R. BIDEN, Jr., Delaware MIKE DeWINE, Ohio HERBERT KOHL, Wisconsin JEFF SESSIONS, Alabama DIANNE FEINSTEIN, California LINDSEY O. GRAHAM, South Carolina RUSSELL D. FEINGOLD, Wisconsin JOHN CORNYN, Texas CHARLES E. SCHUMER, New York SAM BROWNBACK, Kansas RICHARD J. DURBIN, Illinois TOM COBURN, Oklahoma David Brog, Staff Director Michael O'Neill, Chief Counsel Bruce A. Cohen, Democratic Chief Counsel and Staff Director C O N T E N T S ---------- STATEMENTS OF COMMITTEE MEMBERS Page Brownback, Hon. Sam, a U.S. Senator from the State of Kansas..... 1 Leahy, Hon. Patrick J., a U.S. Senator from the State of Vermont, prepared statement............................................. 188 PRESENTERS Cochran, Hon. Thad, a U.S. Senator from the State of Mississippi presenting Regina B. Schofield, Nominee to be Assistant Attorney General, Office of Justice Programs, Department of Justice........................................................ 6 Grassley, Hon. Charles E., a U.S. Senator from the State of Iowa presenting Rachel L. Brand, Nominee to be Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Policy, Department of Justice......... 4 Harkin, Hon. Tom, a U.S. Senator from the State of Iowa presenting Rachel L. Brand, Nominee to be Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Policy, Department of Justice......... 5 Lott, Hon. Trent, a U.S. Senator from the State of Mississippi presenting Alice S. Fisher, Nominee to be Assistant Attorney General, Criminal Division, Department of Justice.............. 7 McConnell, Hon. Mitch, a U.S. Senator from the State of Kentucky presenting Regina B. Schofield, Nominee to be Assistant Attorney General, Office of Justice Programs, Department of Justice........................................................ 3 STATEMENTS OF THE NOMINEES Brand, Rachel L., Nominee to be Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Policy, Department of Justice.................. 8 Questionnaire................................................ 10 Fisher, Alice S., Nominee to be Assistant Attorney General, Criminal Division, Department of Justice....................... 41 Questionnaire................................................ 42 Schofield, Regina B., Nominee to be Assistant Attorney General, Office of Justice Programs, Department of Justice.............. 84 Questionnaire................................................ 85 QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Responses of Rachel L. Brand to questions submitted by Senators Cornyn, Leahy, Kennedy, and Durbin............................. 114 Responses of Alice S. Fisher to questions submitted by Senators Durbin, Leahy, and Kennedy..................................... 139 Responses of Alice S. Fisher to additional questions submitted by Senators Kennedy and Durbin.................................... 164 Responses of Regina B. Schofield to questions submitted by Senators Durbin, and Leahy..................................... 174 CONFIRMATION HEARING TO BE ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE ---------- THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2005 United States Senate, Committee on the Judiciary, Washington, D.C. The Committee met, pursuant to notice, at 4:10 p.m., in room SD-226, Dirksen Senate Office Building, Hon. Sam Brownback presiding. Present: Senators Brownback and Grassley. OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. SAM BROWNBACK, A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF KANSAS Senator Brownback. The hearing will come to order. Thank you all for joining us today for this confirmation hearing process. Senator Specter has asked that I host and chair this confirmation hearing and I look forward to the testimony and the presentations of the various witnesses. Obviously, by the array of stars we have here supporting those nominees, these are outstanding, stellar nominees. I don't know that I have seen a panel quite this powerful supporting the list of nominees any time that I have chaired a hearing. So this must be a mighty good group, and I am certain that it is. We convene the hearing today to consider President Bush's nomination of three outstanding individuals to serve as Assistant Attorneys General at the Department of Justice. The Department's Criminal Division, Office of Legal Policy and Office of Justice Programs are critical agencies charged with everything from prosecution of the war on terror to the provision of grants to combat drug trafficking and domestic violence. The President understands the importance of the missions of these agencies, as shown by the high caliber of these outstanding women who, if confirmed, would lead them. Rachel Brand has been nominated to be Assistant Attorney General at the Office of Legal Policy. Ms. Brand has developed an extensive record of high achievement. After graduating from the University of Minnesota and Harvard Law School, Ms. Brand served as a law clerk to Justice Charles Fried, of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, in 1999. Following her clerkship, she joined the law firm of Cooper, Carvin and Rosenthal. Her work there included a variety of trial and appellate litigation. In January 2001, she was chosen to serve at the White House in the Office of Counsel to the President, first as an assistant counsel and then as an associate counsel. In these capacities, she has provided legal and policy advice to White House officials on a wide range of challenging issues. She left the White House to serve as a law clerk to Supreme Court Justice Anthony M. Kennedy during the 2002-2003 term. After her clerkship, Ms. Brand became Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General in the Office of Legal Policy at the Department of Justice. In this position, she has worked to develop and implement a variety of civil and criminal policy initiatives, and assisted in supervising all aspects of the office's work. Alice Fisher, nominated to head the Department's Criminal Division, has a distinguished record and a wide range of experience. She received her B.A. from Vanderbilt and her J.D. from Catholic University Law School. After law school, she worked for several years as an associate at Sullivan and Cromwell, where she represented corporations in civil litigation, and also represented a death row inmate in a habeas corpus appeal. In 1995 and 1996, Ms. Fisher served as Deputy Special Counsel to the U.S. Senate Committee investigating the Whitewater Development Corporation and related matters. In that role, she supported the Senate's investigation and assisted in drafting the final report. In 1996, Ms. Fisher returned to private practice, this time at the law firm of Latham and Watkins. At Latham, she was a member of the litigation department and the white collar practice group. Her practice focused on the representation of corporations in government investigations and complex civil litigation. In 2001, she became a partner. From 2001 until 2003, Ms. Fisher served as Deputy Attorney General in the Criminal Division of the Department of Justice, excellent work there. Regina Schofield, nominated to head the Office of Justice Programs, will bring a wealth of experience to the position. Ms. Schofield graduated from Mississippi College and received her MBA from Jackson State University. She currently serves as Director of Intergovernmental Affairs and White House Liaison at the Department of Health and Human Services. She previously was Manager of Governmental Relations at the U.S. Postal Service. As Director of Intergovernmental Relations at HHS, Ms. Schofield has been instrumental in advancing intergovernmental relations with over 562 federally-recognized tribal governments. She has developed the Department's first comprehensive tribal consultation policy and has worked to establish formal mechanisms to create an open door for tribes regarding the Department's policy and budget process. She has also worked to streamline the grants process, thereby increasing public awareness of government-funded programs and services. We have a distinguished panel of Senators to introduce, as well, these nominees. I don't know if anybody has a particular time commitment that they need to go through. If not, we usually go from my left to right, unless somebody has a particular time commitment. If not, the Honorable Senator Trent Lott will be the first witness. Senator Lott. Senator Brownback, at this time I think maybe I would like to defer. Maybe you could work the other way. I think the distinguished Whip may have other responsibilities. Senator Brownback. That is a good thought. Senator McConnell, we just jumped to the other end of the table here and we will work from that place. PRESENTATION OF ALICE S. FISHER, NOMINEE TO BE ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL, CRIMINAL DIVISION, DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, BY HON. MITCH MCCONNELL, A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF KENTUCKY Senator McConnell. Well, far be it from me to turn down that opportunity. Thank you very much, Senator Lott. Mr. Chairman, I am thrilled to be here today to introduce Alice Fisher, the President's nominee to be the Assistant Attorney General of the Criminal Division at DOJ. Ms. Fisher is a battle-tested veteran of the war on terror, and with her confirmation she will once again take up a place on the front lines of that struggle. She joined the Justice Department in July of 2001 as Deputy Assistant Attorney General of the Criminal Division. She was placed in charged of counterterrorism efforts. Two months later came September 11. After that horrific day, our Government responded forcefully and quickly. Ms. Fisher's role was vital to the fight. She was responsible for national coordination of the Government's efforts to stamp out these evil acts, including all matters related to September 11 investigations and prosecutions. She coordinated the investigation and prosecution of international and domestic terrorist groups, terrorist acts and terrorist financing. She headed up USA PATRIOT Act implementation and she coordinated the Justice Department's efforts with the FBI, the Department of Defense, the CIA, the NIC and the White House. The man who then held the job to which Ms. Fisher has been nominated, her old boss, was Michael Chertoff, now, as well know, the Secretary of Homeland Security. Secretary Chertoff and Ms. Fisher served together in the Justice Department for two years. Before their Justice Department service, they were both partners at Latham and Watkins, and before that Ms. Fisher and Secretary Chertoff both served as counsels for a U.S. Senate special committee. Secretary Chertoff, who has worked closely with her over the years, has called her, quote, ``one of the best lawyers I have seen in my entire career,'' end quote. The Criminal Division of the Justice Department must focus on matters other than terrorism, of course, and Ms. Fisher is equally talented to deal with those matters as well. As Deputy Assistant Attorney general, she headed up efforts to combat corporate fraud just at a time that the collapse of Enron and other corporate scandals were front-page news. She supervised all corporate fraud matters at Justice, including the securities accounting and health care areas. She participated in the drafting of Sarbanes-Oxley and worked closely with the Securities and Exchange Commission on policy issues. She was born and raised in my hometown of Louisville, Kentucky, as part of a close-knit family. She has five older brothers and sisters. Her father ran a chemical plant and her mother worked the night shift as a nurse. She still has a lot of family back home in Louisville. In fact, I think both of us were there last weekend to watch the Kentucky Derby. She earned her B.A. from Vanderbilt and her law degree from Catholic University here. Her husband, Clint, also serves our Nation as Director of Aviation Policy for TSA. She is the mother of two. You can tell she has been a really busy lady. In a relatively short time, she has already accomplished a great deal. She rose to become a partner in one of America's most prestigious law firms. She then selflessly chose to forego a more lucrative career in private practice to serve her country. Thanks to her, America is a safer place than it was on September 11. Now, the President has asked her to serve once more and she has answered the call. I can't tell you, Ms. Fisher, how grateful we are that you are answering the call again and I am proud to be here to introduce you. Senator Brownback. Thank you. Senator Grassley. PRESENTATION OF RACHEL L. BRAND, NOMINEE TO BE ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL, OFFICE OF LEGAL POLICY, DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, BY HON. CHARLES E. GRASSLEY, A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF IOWA Senator Grassley. I am equally proud to introduce a person that has strong roots in my State, a very young person, Rachel Brand. She has been nominated to be Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Policy, at the Department of Justice. A very excellent candidate, and we ought to be delighted that the President has chosen her for this position. Rachel and her family have strong Iowa connections. Her father was born and raised in Iowa. Her mother went to college in Iowa, and the Brand family lived in Pella, Iowa, for a long time. Recently, the family has moved to Michigan, but her father still works for the Vermeer Manufacturing Company in Pella and she still has much of an extended family remaining in Iowa. So we would extend a warm welcome to Rachel's husband, Jonathan Cohn; Rachel's mother and father, Ruth and Ivan Brand; Rachel's sister, Deborah Hansel, and her brother-in-law, Neil Hansel, and her niece, Megan Hansel. Rachel received her bachelor's degree in political science from the University of Minnesota-Morris and graduated with high distinction and honors. While in college, I first got to know Rachel because she interned in my Washington, D.C. office in 1995. She did a very great job for me at that time, and as often happens we Senators realize that a lot of people who are interns in our office have a very good future and this proves to be true in the case of Rachel. Rachel, after college, got her law degree, cum laude, at Harvard Law School. In law school, Rachel excelled and was the deputy editor-in-chief of the Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy. After law school, she clerked for Justice Charles Fried, of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts. Following her clerkship, Rachel was employed briefly as general counsel to the Elizabeth Dole for President Exploratory Committee, then joining the firm of Cooper, Carvin and Rosenthal, specializing in trial and appellate litigation. In January 2001, after a short stint as associate counsel to the Bush-Cheney transition team, Rachel joined the Office of Counsel to the President, first as assistant counsel, then associate counsel. In the Office of Counsel to the President, she provided legal and policy advice to White House officials on a wide range of issues. She left that position to serve as law clerk for Associate Justice Anthony Kennedy during the 2002-2003 term of the Supreme Court. In July of 2003, she became Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General of the Office of Legal Policy. Here, she worked to develop and implement a variety of civil and criminal policy initiatives, assisting in supervising all aspects of the office's work. In March 2005, she became Acting Assistant of the Office of Legal Policy. This brief review of her background shows that she is uniquely qualified for the position of Assistant Attorney General of the Office of Legal Policy. She is a very intelligent individual, an excellent attorney and, of course, a very young age that we would all be jealous of. Rachel has remarkable accomplishments. She has an outstanding record, too, of public service. I know that Rachel will do a good job anyplace she goes, so I highly recommend her to this Committee and ask my colleagues to support her nomination. Thank you. Senator Brownback. Thank you, Senator Grassley. Senator Harkin. PRESENTATION OF RACHEL L. BRAND, NOMINEE TO BE ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL, OFFICE OF LEGAL POLICY, DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, BY HON. TOM HARKIN, A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF IOWA Senator Harkin. Mr. Chairman, I am pleased to join with my colleague, Senator Grassley, to give my support to Rachel Brand, the nominee to head the Department of Justice's Office of Legal Policy. Rachel, as has been said, is a native of Pella, Iowa, known to many of you probably for its windows and doors, but known to the rest of us for the most beautiful tulips in Iowa, strong families and smart people. I will not go through all of her accomplishments. Senator Grassley did that, I think, quite effectively. All I would add is he mentioned a young age. Everything that Senator Grassley said Rachel Brand did--she did all that by the age of 32. It kind of puts a lot of us to shame. We wonder what we did with our time when we were young. It just shows you she has a great work ethic. Also, I must admit I went a step further about Rachel and I took my inquiries on Rachel back to the source in Pella. I asked the sheriff. Rachel's very proud uncle, Marvin Van Haften, who now heads the Iowa Office of Drug Control Policy, confirmed for me that his niece is indeed a fine, upstanding citizen, growing up in Iowa, as well as not surprisingly a straight-A student. Of course, Mr. Van Haften was the former sheriff of that county for a long time. I would also like to join with Senator Grassley in welcoming Rachel's parents and some other family members here today who still live in Pella. The Office of Legal Policy is one of the offices in the Department of Justice that not many people know about or understand. However, given that the office essentially handles policy changes for the Department of Justice, it is one that has a tremendous responsibility in shaping how we go forward in our fight against terrorism. In our continuing war on terror, balancing how to effectively fight terrorism within our criminal justice system and within our Constitution continues to pose new and difficult challenges that will fall squarely upon the person who heads this office. In selecting Rachel Brand, I believe the President has made a good choice to lead the Department in making those good balances between our Constitution and our criminal justice system and fighting terrorism. He has made a great choice and I join with my colleague in hoping that the Committee will confirm her rapidly. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Senator Brownback. Thank you, Senator Harkin. We appreciate that support. If any of you, after presenting, need to leave for other meetings, it certainly is understood. Senator Harkin. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Senator Brownback. Senator Cochran. PRESENTATION OF REGINA B. SCHOFIELD, NOMINEE TO BE ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL, OFFICE OF JUSTICE PROGRAMS, DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, BY HON. THAD COCHRAN, A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI Senator Cochran. Mr. Chairman, I am pleased to be here this afternoon to introduce Ms. Regina Schofield to the Committee and to recommend her confirmation as an Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Justice Programs at the United States Department of Justice. Ms. Schofield was born and raised and educated in Mississippi. We have a number of mutual friends in Franklin County, Mississippi, which she still claims as home, and she comes highly recommended to me by them. She received a bachelor's degree in business administration from Mississippi College and a master's degree from Jackson State University. She began her career in Government serving as Deputy Director of the Office of White House Liaison in the U.S. Department of Education. She later served as Manager of Government Relations at the United States Postal Service. In February 2001, Ms. Schofield became White House liaison to Secretary Tommy Thompson at the Department of Health and Human Services. In less than two years, she became Director of the Office of Intergovernmental Affairs at HHS, where she was the principal adviser to Secretary Thompson on the impact of Department policies on State, local and tribal governments. As Assistant Attorney General, Ms. Schofield would be responsible for the overall management and oversight of the Office of Justice Programs. Ms. Schofield has proven that she has the talent, the experience and the capability to serve with distinction as Assistant Attorney General in the Department of Justice. I urge the Committee to recommend her confirmation by the Senate. Senator Brownback. Thank you very much, Senator Cochran. And now the Honorable Trent Lott. PRESENTATION OF REGINA B. SCHOFIELD, NOMINEE TO BE ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL, OFFICE OF JUSTICE PROGRAMS, DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, BY HON. TRENT LOTT, A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI Senator Lott. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, Senator Brownback, for allowing us to appear before you and the Judiciary Committee today in support of these very fine nominees. It is a great pleasure to join my senior colleague from Mississippi in endorsing the very fine nominee, Regina Schofield, to be Assistant Attorney General of the Department of Justice. I would like to ask that my entire statement be made a part of the record as I have it prepared. Senator Brownback. Without objection. Senator Lott. I want to extend my congratulations to the other nominees today. These are three very fine, very impressive, young people that will be going to the Justice Department in very critical positions and I am convinced they will do a magnificent job. In fact, the quality of these women probably will begin to straighten out the Justice Department in a way it has never experienced before. So I congratulate them. I am very proud to sit here and listen to their records of achievement and their work in the administration, or administrations, and to congratulate their families who are all here today. I know their families are very proud of them. I won't repeat what is in the resume of Ms. Schofield. Senator Cochran did a very fine job of that. I am very proud of her background, being from Bude, Mississippi. It is a long way from Bude, Mississippi, to Washington, D.C., and the Justice Department. In fact, if I gave you a map, you probably couldn't find it, but you have got some areas in Kansas pretty far out at the end of the road, too. It is a lot of beautiful people, and I know that community is very proud of Regina and her achievements. She has done a good job everywhere she has been. She has worked hard. She obviously has outstanding managerial skills and it is evidenced by not only her education and her work in different roles in the administration, at the White House, at HHS and the Department of Education, but she also served on multiple boards and commissions. She serves on the Board of Visitors of the College of William and Mary, where she oversees he school's budget. She also serves as a member of the Board of Trustees of the American Council of Young Political Leaders, an organization dedicated to developing the leadership potential of emerging leaders in politics and government. So in view of her history of service, certainly it is no surprise that she would receive this nomination. I am convinced she is going to do a wonderful job, particularly working in the Office of Justice Programs. And I must say I am very proud of the record of achievement and all that she has done in her very young life, and so I congratulate her and thank her for her dedication. I know she will be confirmed and will do a wonderful job at the Department of Justice. Senator Brownback. Thank you very much, Senator Lott. Thank you both, and all the Senators for presenting here today and introducing these nominees. We will now call up the three nominees, if they would come forward--Rachel Brand, Alice Fisher and Regina Schofield. We need to swear you in, if you would, ahead of time, so if you would please stand and raise your right hand. Do you swear that the testimony you will give to this Committee will be the truth, the full truth and nothing but the truth, so help you God? Ms. Brand. I do. Ms. Fisher. I do. Ms. Schofield. I do. Senator Brownback. Thank you. You may be seated. Well, this is quite a panel, ladies. I am looking forward to the testimony. We will start with Rachel Brand, if we could go with you first. If you have a full statement, we can put it into the record. That will be great. I would invite you if you have any family members here to introduce them. To me, this is a family obligation. You are the point person, but there is a whole bunch of troops behind you and I would like to recognize and thank them as well. So if each of you could do that, then I will have some questions after your testimony. Ms. Brand. STATEMENT OF RACHEL L. BRAND, NOMINEE TO BE ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL, OFFICE OF LEGAL POLICY, DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE Ms. Brand. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I do not have a full statement, although I do look forward to taking your questions. I have some thank yous, though, and some acknowledgements. I thank you for chairing this hearing so late on a Thursday. I know you have got a lot else on your plate with everything going on in the Judiciary Committee right now. I would like to thank the President and the Attorney General for their confidence in me through this nominations. I would like to thank Senators Harkin and Grassley for being here. It is a real honor for me to have the support of both of my home State Senators from Iowa. And, finally, I would like to acknowledge my family, especially my parents, Ruth and Ivan Brand, who have been introduced, and my husband, Jonathan Cohn. Senator Brownback. Could we have them stand if they are here--have the parents stand, and husband? [The individuals stood.] Senator Brownback. Great. Thank you very much for being here. Ms. Brand. I also have three other family members from out of town. My aunt Beckie and my cousin Katie drove from Michigan yesterday, and my sister-in-law Erica Cohn is here from New York, and so I thank them. Senator Brownback. You have got to stand, too. If you are going to drive that far for this, we want to see you. [The individuals stood.] Senator Brownback. Thank you very much for being here. Ms. Brand. And I have a number of other friends here, too, and I thank them all for being here. My siblings, Deborah, Thomas and Andrew, couldn't be here today, but I thank them for their support, as well, and I look forward to taking your questions. 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Good. We will have a few as we go along. Ms. Fisher. STATEMENT OF ALICE S. FISHER, NOMINEE TO BE ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL, CRIMINAL DIVISION, DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE Ms. Fisher. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for chairing this hearing. I, as well, would like to thank the President and the Attorney General for having confidence in me for this position, and thank Senator McConnell for that very nice opening statement. I would acknowledge my family members that are here--my mother, who is the mother of six--I was the baby--who taught me the work ethic by working the night shift while raising six kids, and my husband, Clint Fisher, who also works for the Government at TSA, and my two little boys, one of which is already asleep, a 3-year-old--that is probably why we aren't hearing him right now--Luke, and my son Matthew. Senator Brownback. Very good. We won't ask the father and the two children, but the mother, if you could stand, we would love to recognize you, if that would be possible. [Ms. Biedenbender stood.] Senator Brownback. Thank you for being here. Do you have a statement, any comments? [The biographical information of Alice S. Fisher Brand follows.] [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.032 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.033 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.034 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.035 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.036 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.037 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.038 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.039 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.040 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.041 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.042 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.043 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.044 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.045 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.046 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.047 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.048 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.049 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.050 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.051 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.052 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.053 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.054 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.055 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.056 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.057 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.058 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.059 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.060 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.061 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.062 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.063 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.064 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.065 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.066 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.067 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.068 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.069 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.070 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.071 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.072 [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T2785.073 Ms. Fisher. No, but I look forward to your questions, Senator. Senator Brownback. Ms. Schofield. STATEMENT OF REGINA B. SCHOFIELD, NOMINEE TO BE ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL, OFFICE OF JUSTICE PROGRAMS, DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE Ms. Schofield. Thank you, Senator Brownback, and thank you again for chairing this meeting. We really appreciate it. I want to thank the President and Attorney General for their support in my nomination, and I appreciate Senators Cochran and Lott on their support. Bude is a long way from here, so I do appreciate it. I want to introduce my husband, Steve, and my son, Samuel, and my mother- and father-in-law, Bob and Doris Schofield, who had a very harrowing experience on I-95 today. So I appreciate them being here. Senator Brownback. If you can stand, please do it, from that harrowing experience. [The individuals stood.] Senator Brownback. Thank you for being here. Ms. Schofield. I appreciate the support of my friends today and there are a lot of them here today. So thank you. 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The questions I have are not tough ones to drill you. We have heard the support from home State Senators, and the backgrounds each of you have are outstanding qualifications. I would, though, like to go down the bench and as you look at the place you have been nominated to, what is it you see as the top issue or issues that you are going to be confronted with in working there? I know you are not in the position yet. I don't know of any opposition to any of you going into these positions, so I think it clears through pretty quick, although strange things happen around here. What do you see as the top issues you are going to be confronting? Ms. Brand? Ms. Brand. Thank you, Senator Brownback. The Office of Legal Policy handles an extraordinarily broad range of issues, ranging from everything from tort reform to drug policy and terrorism. But the top priority of the Department of Justice, writ large, is the war on terrorism, and so that has been my focus as the Principal Deputy Assistant AG over the last couple of years and it will continue to be my primary focus going forward. There is a lot of legislation on the table this year and the threat of terrorism is not receding, so that will continue to be my top priority. Senator Brownback. Ms. Fisher? Ms. Fisher. Thank you, Senator. As well, for the Criminal Division the top priority remains terrorism and protecting our homeland. I had the opportunity, as you know, to work at the Department in the terrorism area for two years, and I look forward to working side by side with those very dedicated career people that work night and day combating terrorism. So I look forward to getting back with them. It is in my heart and I look forward to that. My other priorities would obviously continue to be corporate fraud and white-collar fraud. That continues to be a priority of the Department, as well as obscenity, child pornography and computer crimes, the whole range of computer crimes that are just rampant through our Nation right now. Whether it is drugs on the computer, obscenity, child pornography, we need to find better, effective ways to deal with these crimes. Guns and drugs, public corruption--these are also things that the Criminal Division is very focused on. Senator Brownback. Ms. Schofield? Ms. Schofield. Thank you, Senator Brownback. If confirmed, I would continue to advance the mission of the Office of Justice Programs and support the President's and the Attorney General's initiatives on DNA. There are some issues dealing with serving victims of crime. That is an issue that is very close to my heart and I would work tirelessly to support our local law enforcement, State and local law enforcement agencies. Senator Brownback. Ms. Brand, in the war on terrorism, it goes on and just today a group of us put in an immigration bill because one of the concerns that a lot of people have, and realistically, that we have got people coming over that seek to do us harm. A lot of people enter the United States legally each year and a lot of people enter illegally. The PATRIOT Act has had a lot of controversy, it seems, surrounding it. What is your take of its effectiveness in the war on terrorism, not the legal--and there have been a number of hearings held on that--but the effectiveness of what the PATRIOT Act has done to date? Ms. Brand. Thank you. Alice is certainly in a good position to answer this question, as well, having worked in the Criminal Division following 9/11. But we have seen in a number of cases the effectiveness of many of the provisions of the PATRIOT Act, particularly the provisions dealing with information-sharing between the criminal justice field and the intelligence field. The PATRIOT Act took down the wall, so to speak, that divided those different elements of the Government prior to the PATRIOT Act. Those provisions of the Act were used in the Lackawanna 6 investigation, the Portland 7 investigation, the Virginia jihad investigation, and others, and have really become part of the way of effectively doing business in combating terrorism now. Many of the Act's provisions also help us in the war on violent crime. There is, for example, a provision, Section 212, that allows Internet service providers to voluntarily disclose information if they see an imminent threat of death or serious physical injury. That has been used in cases ranging from defusing a bomb threat to rescuing a kidnapping victim and rescuing young girls who were kidnapped and taken across State lines by pedophiles. So it really has been effective across the board. Senator Brownback. Ms. Fisher, you mentioned a couple of areas that I am curious on how you think we are doing today or how we might improve both in corporate fraud and on the issue of pornography. We had the huge difficulty in the late 1990s on the corporate fraud. How do you feel we are doing today on that score? Ms. Fisher. Well, I think the Government has been very effective in combating corporate fraud. When I was at the Department, Sarbanes-Oxley was passed and the corporate fraud task force was set up to specifically focus on corporate fraud. And I saw the results while I was in the Government, and now being on the outside in private practice I have seen what effect those laws actually had on the board rooms across America. I think such things as the certification provisions that were put into Sarbanes-Oxley had a real effect on decisionmaking in boards of directors for our public corporations. I think the Government is doing a good job in increasing the awareness and being able to increase investor confidence in our public corporations because of the efforts of the Government in this regard. Senator Brownback. On pornography, there have been a number of charges that we have not taken this battle on. In spite of Supreme Court rulings that allow the prosecution of this on a local community standard basis, a number of groups are charging that there has just not been anything done on this. Ms. Fisher. Well, child exploitation and obscenity was not one of the areas that I supervised while I was at the Department before, but I know that recently the Department of Justice has set up an obscenity task force out of the Criminal Division to focus the Government's resources from not only within the Department of Justice, but also with other agencies--Homeland Security, postal inspectors, et cetera--to really focus on this problem. So I think that there will be a commitment to this going forward. What has happened with child pornography and obscenity because of the Internet is a really horrible thing and we have to take efforts now to combat it or it will continue to spread. Senator Brownback. I think the Justice Department is going to be key on this, and I met with the Attorney General about it and he mentioned it in his confirmation hearing. But the reason I say that is that you have the legal capacity to prosecute these cases that a number of people at State or local levels don't have. Even though the standard is on a community basis standard, you are the ones that have probably the expertise to be able to move, and much of it goes all across the country, if not internationally. I do hope you can step up and either provide assistance in prosecuting some of these cases on a State and local basis or take on some high-profile cases yourself in this process, because I do think a few prosecutions of selected items would have a significant impact on this. I think it is like a $10 billion industry now. Ms. Fisher. Well, I certainly plan on doing that, Senator, and looking at that and focusing on that if I am lucky enough to be confirmed. Senator Brownback. Ms. Schofield, you mentioned DNA issues. That has been certainly a big one on some capital punishment cases. Are we getting that information and technology widespread across the country now? Is it available to most jurisdictions to use on an as-needed basis? Ms. Schofield. I believe that the billion-dollar initiative that the President has proposed is to start relieving some of the backlog and provide our State and local laboratories and agencies with enough wherewithal to get going and get rid of some of those backlogs. Senator Brownback. I don't know, and maybe this isn't fair to ask, but do you know where that is in the allocation process? There has been that appropriation. Has it been allocated? Is it being allocated? Do you know where we are on that? Ms. Schofield. I think that the $1 billion is in the pipeline. I may be mistaken about that, but I would be happy to look into it. Senator Brownback. I was just curious. Ms. Schofield. There are two parts to it. There is $50 million to help exonerate the innocent and educate defense lawyers and prosecutors, but there is also the $1 billion initiative to help with the backlog. Senator Brownback. The TV shows certainly have an impact on some of these, as well, that my family watches. Ms. Schofield. Yes. Senator Brownback. I don't get to watch them as often as I would like, but I get reports from the rest of my family members about a number of them. Thank you all for being here. I don't have further questions. You are outstanding nominees. I will certainly be supporting you. I don't know of any opposition. I hope we can move this through rapidly on the floor. We will keep the record open the requisite number of days. I do have a statement that we will put into the record for Senator Leahy, who unfortunately could not be here, but had a series of comments and some questions, I believe, that he is submitting to the various nominees. If you could respond to those in as rapid order as possible, that would certainly help out. I congratulate you. I congratulate your family members. I thank you for your public service. It is a tough life, it is a great life. It is a great one of contribution where you are giving of yourself to the country and really around the world by the standards that we put forward here. So I consider it a very high calling, and one in the Justice Department even more so. When you are helping to dispense justice, it is hard to have a higher calling than that. Thanks for doing it. God bless you all and we will move this on forward. The hearing is adjourned. 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