Security News: Attorney General Merrick B. Garland Delivers Remarks at the 30th Annual Federal Inter-Agency Holocaust Remembrance Program

Source: United States Department of Justice 2

Remarks as Delivered

Thank you. It’s a privilege to join you in this Great Hall, as we honor the survivors of the Holocaust and remember its victims on Yom Hashoah.

I am grateful to the Federal Inter-Agency Holocaust Remembrance Committee for inviting me to speak and hosting this important program, now in its 30th year.

It’s such a gift to be here with Peter Gorog and Manny Mandel, whose stories of courage and resilience inspire all of us.

As Attorney General, I am proud to serve alongside 115,000 extraordinary professionals in the Justice Department. 

Every day, we work to uphold the rule of law, to keep our country safe, and to protect the civil rights of everyone in this nation.

Each of us came to the Department for different reasons.

For me, it was to repay the debt my family owes to this country for our very lives.

Before World War I, America gave my family refuge from religious persecution that allowed them to survive the Holocaust when World War II came.

My grandmother was one of five children born in what is now Belarus. Three made it to the United States, including my grandmother.

Two did not make it. They were killed in the Holocaust.

If not for America, there is little doubt that the same would have happened to her.

But this country took her in. And under the protection of its laws, she was able to live here without fear of persecution.

I am also married to the daughter of a refugee who found protection in the United States.

Shortly after Hitler’s army marched into Austria in 1938, my wife’s mother escaped to America. And under the protection of our laws, she too, was able to live without fear of persecution.

That protection is what distinguishes America from so many other countries.

The protection of law – the Rule of Law – is the foundation of our system of government.

It is also one of the most powerful tools in the fight against hate.  

All of us know about the disturbing rise in antisemitism in this country. 

Indeed, hate crimes against Jews comprised the majority of religion-related hate incidents reported in 2021.

The Justice Department is doing everything in our power to combat the rise in hate-fueled acts and threats of violence.

We are aggressively enforcing hate crime statutes.

We have increased our capacity to investigate hate crimes and hate incidents.

And we are working with state and local governments to do the same.

We do this because we all know what happens when hate is allowed to take root.

We do this to ensure that a tragedy like the Holocaust never happens again.

And we do this because it is part of this Department’s historical inheritance.

In 1945, Justice Robert H. Jackson, a former Attorney General of the United States, served as the Chief Prosecutor at the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg.

In his opening statement, after describing the horrors committed by the Nazis, Justice Jackson emphasized the importance of the Rule of Law.

The trials would not only display to the world the depths of the defendants’ depravity, he explained. They would also put the forces of law, “its precepts, its prohibitions and, most [important] of all, its sanctions, on the side of peace, so that men and women of good will, in all countries, may have ‘leave to live by no man’s leave, underneath the law.’”

Decades later, in 1979, the Justice Department created the Office of Special Investigations to identify, denaturalize, and deport Nazi criminals in the United States.

That office also provided support to foreign counterparts in their efforts to bring to justice perpetrators in their jurisdictions.

My friend Eli Rosenbaum – who is well known to all of you – formerly led the Office of Special Investigations. There, he prosecuted World War II Nazi cases for nearly four decades.

I first met Eli in an elevator here at DOJ on a day he had brought Miep Gies to meet then-Attorney General Janet Reno. Mrs. Gies had risked her life to protect Anne Frank and others hiding in the Secret Annex in Amsterdam.

Now Eli leads our efforts against Russian war crimes. I am glad that Eli will be moderating a discussion later in today’s program.

The Justice Department knows that we have an obligation – both legal and moral – to hold individuals accountable for crimes driven by antisemitism and by all forms of hatred.

An obligation to help prevent and deter future acts of hate. An obligation to preserve the Rule of Law.

Through our work, we are sending a clear message that this Justice Department will not allow illegal acts of hatred to go unchecked or unchallenged.

As Americans, we also share obligation – an obligation to remember the horrors of the Holocaust and to listen to the stories of the survivors.

We have a shared obligation to stand up against the dangerous rise in antisemitism and hatred in all of its forms.

It is what we owe to the six million murdered in the Holocaust.

And it is what we owe to future generations.

Thank you for being with us today.

Defense News: Annual HURREX/CG Exercise Preps Naval District Washington Region for Hurricane Season

Source: United States Navy

Navy installations throughout the Naval District Washington (NDW) region will get a head start on any potential hurricane or severe storm activity in coming weeks during Hurricane Exercise/Citadel Gale (HURREX/CG), an annual exercise that runs April 24-May 5 and trains participants in all aspects of hurricane response and recovery.

“Personnel will be securing facilities and ensuring service members, civilians, and their families are prepared for the onset of adverse weather conditions,” said Matthew Brown, the NDW planner for HURREX/CG. “Recovery for our missions, families, and operations after the storm passes are what we are aiming to improve every year.”

Hurricane season runs in the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico from June 1 to November 30, with peak months in August to October, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

HURREX/CG gives Navy installations advance preparation. Participants will train in accounting for personnel and their family members, conducting evacuations, assisting those who are injured or displaced, protecting buildings from winds and flooding, and restoring operations post-storm.

In the first week, participants will also train in tracking hurricane activity along the U.S. Atlantic coast, simulating upgrades to the Tropical Cyclone Conditions of Readiness (TCCOR), and implementing base safety procedures in response to each TCCOR upgrade. They will shift in the second week to focusing on procedures for recovery, including lifting evacuation orders, reopening installations, and conducting damage assessments.

Brown’s office (N36) is responsible for executing HURREX/CG. It plans the exercise in coordination with installation training officers, Navy emergency preparedness officers, and the Fleet and Family Support Centers (FFSC).

“The NDW N36 team has worked hard to provide a realistic exercise to challenge our personnel to prepare them for real-world disasters,” Brown said.

This year, there will be an additional partner: Joint Task Force-National Capital Region (JTF-NCR), which will observe the exercises and receive reports on their outcomes. Brown said that JTF-NCR would be a source of assistance in an actual hurricane and that N36 anticipates inviting the regional command to play an expanded role in HURREX/CG in future years.

“We will certainly be working with JTF-NCR during real-world incidents. We plan on growing this relationship moving forward,” Brown said.

The Navy Family Accountability Assessment System (NFAAS), which stores emergency-contact information for Sailors, civilian employees, and their family members, is another key element of hurricane preparedness. All Sailors and civilian employees must enter their information on NFAAS and update it yearly so that the command can account for each of them during an emergency such as a hurricane.

To access NFAAS, please visit https://navyfamily.navy.mil/cas/login?service=https%3A%2F%2Fnavyfamily.navy.mil%2F.

The FFSCs are also key partners in HURREX/CG. During a hurricane or other emergency, commanding officers can authorize the FFSCs to open Emergency Family Assistance Centers (EFAC) that offer emergency-specific aid and outreach, such as medical referrals or information on where to find shelter.

“The EFAC is going to be that central point for everyone to go to and everyone to get access for referrals. It could be as simple as ‘I need to know where to evacuate to’ or it could be ‘A tree fell through my living room,’” said Tiffany Croshaw, an emergency management specialist with NDW Fleet and Family Readiness (N9). “We give them the referrals to help them move past the destruction, move past the damage, and get back to a sense of normalcy.”

A person seeking assistance from EFAC can complete a Needs Assessment, on which they list their contact information and specify what type of help they need. The form lists 19 categories of needed help, such as medical assistance, missing persons, and housing assistance, among others.

Croshaw said that the form is available in electronic form on the EFAC website—the website, like the EFAC itself, is only active during emergencies—or in paper form at the EFAC office. She said that once a Needs Assessment is submitted, the EFAC opens a case and routes the form to emergency case managers at the installation FFSCs, who then reach out to the impacted families to provide support.

“These needs assessments are so important. The families put everything they need help with on the form, and that’s how we’re going to give them long-term assistance,” she said.

Rebeca Baker, Fleet and Family Readiness (N9) program analyst, said that the NDW region’s six installation-level FFSCs will also band together to serve as a region-wide EFAC in the event of a hurricane or other large-scale disaster. She said that they will all “exercise EFACs, both virtually and in person,” during this year’s HURREX/CG.

Baker said that this year’s HURREX/CG will put more focus than past years’ exercises on “post-disaster recovery,” which includes helping those who have been impacted and restoring communities and installations to normal life as quickly as possible. She said that the FFSCs will prepare to spring into action, if needed, to facilitate a return to a stable, mission-ready status throughout the region.

“We want to make sure that the EFACs are ready to make decisions in a real-world emergency and to make referrals to people who need them,” she said. “We provide families with contact to the Red Cross, to FEMA, to all of these organizations that can offer them any needed assistance.”

For more NDW information, please visit www.facebook.com/NavDistWash, https://www.instagram.com/navdistwash/, https://www.cnic.navy.mil/regions/ndw.html.

Defense News: NAS Whidbey SAR Rescues Skier Near Ruby Mountain

Source: United States Navy

A Search and Rescue (SAR) team from Naval Air Station (NAS) Whidbey Island rescued a back country skier with a broken leg near Ruby Mountain in the North Cascade Mountains, Saturday, April 15, 2023.
 
The SAR crew received the call to rescue the skier, a 33-year-old man, in the early evening and were off the ground at NAS Whidbey Island’s Ault Field by 6 p.m.
 
The SAR crew quickly found the patient, inserted two crewmembers via rappel and, after preparing him for transport, hoisted the patient and crew members back aboard the helicopter.
 
The patient was transported to St. Joseph Medical Center in Bellingham, Wash. by 7:50 p.m.
 
Naval Air Station Whidbey Island SAR has conducted 6 missions this calendar year, which includes one MEDEVAC, one search and four rescues.
 
The Navy SAR unit operates three MH-60S helicopters from NAS Whidbey Island as search and rescue/medical evacuation (SAR/MEDEVAC) platforms for the EA-18G aircraft as well as other squadrons and personnel assigned to the installation.  Pursuant to the National SAR Plan of the United States, the unit may also be used for civil SAR/MEDEVAC needs to the fullest extent practicable on a non-interference basis with primary military duties according to applicable national directives, plans, guidelines and agreements; specifically, the unit may launch in response to tasking by the Air Force Rescue Coordination Center (based on a Washington State Memorandum of Understanding) for inland missions, and/or tasking by the United States Coast Guard for all other aeronautical and maritime regions, when other assets are unavailable.
 

Drug Enforcement Administration Announces Spring Take Back Day

Source: United States Department of Justice News

Memphis, TN – The Drug Enforcement Administration has announced the date of its 24th National Prescription Drug Take Back Day. On Saturday, April 22, DEA, and its partners will collect tablets, capsules, patches, and other solid forms of prescription drugs.

For more than a decade, DEA’s National Prescription Drug Take Back Day has helped Americans easily rid their homes of unneeded medications—those that are old, unwanted, or expired—that too often become a gateway to addiction.

Take Back Day offers free and anonymous disposal of unneeded medications at more than 4,000 local drop-off locations nationwide.

What: National Prescription Drug Take Back Day

When: Saturday, April 22 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. local time

Who: State and local law enforcement partners across Kentucky, Tennessee, and West Virginia

Where: For a complete list of collection sites, visit www.DEATakeBack.com

In Memphis, the “Street Team for Overdose Prevention” (S.T.O.P.), a collaboration of several agencies, encourage citizens to turn in unused medications safely and anonymously at 2811 Clarke Road.

In partnership with local law enforcement, Take Back Day has removed more than 8,300 tons of medication from circulation since its inception.

Collection sites will not accept syringes, sharps, and illicit drugs. Liquid products, such as cough syrup, should remain sealed in their original container. The cap must be tightly sealed to prevent leakage.

To find a collection site near you, visit www.DEATakeBack.com.

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For more information, please contact Public Information Officer Cherri Green at (901) 544-4231 or cherri.green@usdoj.gov. Follow @ WDTNNews on Twitter for office news and updates.

Hopkinton Man Sentenced to Six Years in Prison on Child Pornography Charges

Source: United States Department of Justice News

PROVIDENCE – A Hopkinton man who previously admitted to a federal judge that he possessed and shared child pornography while he was awaiting trial in Rhode Island state court in two unrelated child pornography cases was sentenced today to six years in federal prison, announced United States attorney Zachary A. Cunha.

Christopher Leherissier, 34, admitted that in February 2021, he uploaded video files of child pornography involving prepubescent children via an account on the online messenger application Kik that he managed and that he used to store child pornography.

Members of the Rhode Island State Police Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force identified an IP address, email address, and a Kik screenname Leherissier untilized to upload images of child pornography. Task Force members identfied 160 images and 124 videos of child pornography stored on a mobile device and a hard drive seiezed from Leherisser at the time of his arrest; and 80 images and 101 videos of child pornography stored in two email accounts he controlled.

At the time of his arrest in this matter, Leherissier was on pre-trial on two different cases pending in Rhode Island state court involving charges of allegedly solicitating a minor and disseminating indecent matter to that minor in early 2020; and, in a separate matter dated from the fall of 2020, for allegedly being in possession of child pornography stored in a DropBox account as well as on his electronic devices.

Related to his most recent arrest, Leherisser pleaded guilty in federal court on November 15, 2022, to charges of distribution of child pornography and possession of child pornography. He was sentenced today by U.S. District Court Judge William E. Smith to seventy-two months of incarceration to be followed by ten years of federal supervised release. Additionally, Leherisser is ordered to pay a statutory mandated restitution in the amount of $3,000 to each of eight identified victims who appear in images and videos shared by Leherisser and who sought restitution.

The matter prosecuted in U.S. District Court was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Dulce Donovan.

Homeland Security Investigations assisted the ICAC Task Force in the investigation of this matter.

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