Thomas E. Perez, Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice, speaks at a news conference in Albuquerque, New Mexico, November 27, 2012. President Barack Obama today will nominate Perez to lead the Department of Labor. (Pat Vasquez-Cunningham/Albuquerque Journal/Zuma Press/MCT)
Thomas E. Perez, Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice, speaks at a news conference in Albuquerque, New Mexico, November 27, 2012. President Barack Obama today will nominate Perez to lead the Department of Labor. (Pat Vasquez-Cunningham/Albuquerque Journal/Zuma Press/MCT)
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A Department of Justice law enforcement officer holds a handgun belonging to Alexander Hernandez in Whittier, California, on February 10, 2013. Hernandez was in violation of judge's order by possessing a hand gun. California has the nation's only program to confiscate guns from people who bought them legally but later became disqualified.
A Department of Justice law enforcement officer holds a handgun belonging to Alexander Hernandez in Whittier, California, on February 10, 2013. Hernandez was in violation of judge's order by possessing a hand gun. California has the nation's only program to confiscate guns from people who bought them legally but later became disqualified.
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California Senate leader Darrell Steinberg, left, and Democratic Sen. Kevin de León of Los Angeles examine an assault rifle that a state Department of Justice representative displayed Tuesday during a Capitol hearing. Two former state Senate leaders urged lawmakers to toughen the state's gun laws.
California Senate leader Darrell Steinberg, left, and Democratic Sen. Kevin de León of Los Angeles examine an assault rifle that a state Department of Justice representative displayed Tuesday during a Capitol hearing. Two former state Senate leaders urged lawmakers to toughen the state's gun laws.
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A customer applies for a cash loan at a Money Mart on Broadway and 20th Street in Sacramento mWednesday June 27, 2001. New legislation (SB 898) would reduce the fees associated with payday loans, improve the disclosure of borrower's rights to consumers, establish a toll-free number for customer complaints, and require lenders to report data regarding their practices to the Department of Justice. But most importantly, the bill would provide repeat borrowers the opportunity to get off the payday loan treadmill by paying off their loans in installments. The Sacramento Bee / Randy Pench
A customer applies for a cash loan at a Money Mart on Broadway and 20th Street in Sacramento mWednesday June 27, 2001. New legislation (SB 898) would reduce the fees associated with payday loans, improve the disclosure of borrower's rights to consumers, establish a toll-free number for customer complaints, and require lenders to report data regarding their practices to the Department of Justice. But most importantly, the bill would provide repeat borrowers the opportunity to get off the payday loan treadmill by paying off their loans in installments. The Sacramento Bee / Randy Pench
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Letter to the Editor: A horrible nightmare
June 16, 2013
| DesMoinesRegister.com
'' We are from the Internal Revenue Service, the National Security Agency and Eric Holder's Department of Justice,'' their leader said.'' And we're here to make you safe....
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