Holding the Line
Inside the Nation's Preeminent US Attorney's Office and Its Battle with the Trump Justice Department
"A cautionary tale about how political forces can undermine the quest for justice." - Barbara McQuade, The Washington Post
The gripping and explosive memoir of serving as US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, in the face of the Justice Department’s attempts to protect Trump’s friends and punish his enemies.
Ascending to the leadership role of US Attorney for the Southern District, which includes Manhattan and several counties to the north, is a capstone to any legal career: it entails guiding a team of the best lawyers in America in selecting and winning cases that often have global import. Geoffrey Berman was honored to be tapped for the job by Donald Trump in 2018. The manner in which Trump had dispatched his predecessor Preet Bharara was troubling, but the institution was fabled for its independence. Surely he could manage.
So began one of the most tumultuous two-and-a-half-year stretches in the over two-hundred-thirty year history of the office. Almost immediately, Berman found himself pushing back against the Trump Justice Department’s blatant efforts to bring weak cases against political foes and squash worthy cases that threatened to tarnish allies and Trump himself. When Bill Barr became attorney general, Berman hoped and believed things would get better, but instead they got much worse. The heart of Holding the Line is his never-before-told account of the lengths Barr went to in corrupting the independence of the office, and the lengths Berman had to go in preserving it. Finally, Trump and Barr, fed up with Berman’s principles, summarily fired him, though he refused to go quietly and prevented Barr from installing someone who might be more compliant. Berman’s determined defense of the values of prosecutorial independence, without fear or favor, made him a hero to everyone who shares those values.
Holding the Line also relates the remarkable casework of the Southern District in Berman’s time there, including taking down notorious sex traffickers Jeffrey Epstein and Lawrence Ray, Big Pharma executives, and vicious criminal syndicates, and repatriating Nazi-looted art. Riveting in themselves, these stories showcase the esprit de corps that makes the Southern District so special, and the stakes Berman felt in protecting its integrity against all foes, up to and including the US attorney general and the president of the United States.
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Release date
September 13, 2022 -
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780593300305
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- ISBN: 9780593300305
- File size: 1702 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Kirkus
October 15, 2022
The former U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York dishes on the corrupt Trump administration. "One of the things you learn as a prosecutor is that there are a surprising number of people in the world who enjoy talking like mobsters when they're behind closed doors," writes prosecutor Berman in a memoir whose every page touches still-fresh headlines. One of those people was Berman's former boss Donald Trump. The author, who describes himself as a "Rockefeller Republican," came into office by means familiar to Trump watchers as, he suspects, a compromise candidate in a power struggle between Chris Christie and Jared Kushner, with Rudy Giuliani in a corner position. It was politics from Day 1, from trying to retain independence in the Mueller investigation to the prosecution of former Trump counsel Michael Cohen. The latter had a denouement in Berman and associates' subsequent probe into possible campaign finance violations, when newly installed Attorney General Bill Barr "not only tried to kill the ongoing investigations but--incredibly--suggested that Cohen's conviction on campaign finance charges be reversed." Thereafter, Berman writes, he was in constant struggle against Barr, who, "always eager to please his boss, appeared to be doing Trump's bidding" by interfering in matters such as a census question on citizenship or hijinks on the part of wealthy allies of Turkey's president, a pal of Trump's until he wasn't. Jeffrey Epstein, Michael Avenatti, and Steve Bannon are among the many villains of this book, but Barr is the worst of the lot: instead of protecting the Constitution, he "was looking for clever, invisible ways to let Trump undermine our rule of law." Barr finally fired Berman by press release, and this book stands not just as a compelling look at how justice works, but also as a fine specimen of sweet revenge. An instructive, highly readable account of the law, its protectors, and its enemies.COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Formats
- Kindle Book
- OverDrive Read
- EPUB ebook
subjects
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- English
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