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Anne Milgram
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| In office June 29, 2007 – Present |
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| Preceded by | Stuart Rabner |
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Anne Milgram has been the Attorney General of New Jersey since June 2007.
Milgram had served as First Assistant Attorney General, the second-highest position in the New Jersey Department of Law and Public Safety, having taken office on February 14, 2006. She served as Acting Attorney General in September 2006 while there was a vacancy after the previous Attorney General had stepped down from office and before the Governor's nominee was confirmed and sworn into office. She was nominated and confirmed as Attorney General in June 2007.
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Milgram became Acting Attorney General on September 1, 2006, following the resignation of former Attorney General Zulima Farber.[1] On September 25, 2006, Stuart Rabner, Corzine's choice to fill the vacancy, was confirmed by a 35–0 margin by the New Jersey Senate[2].
Milgram had been mentioned as a potential attorney general nominee for Governor of New Jersey Jon Corzine. However, Rabner, then the Governor's Chief Counsel, was nominated by Governor Corzine on August 24, 2006, to replace Farber as Attorney General[3]. Milgram served as Acting Attorney General on an interim basis until Rabner was confirmed and sworn in to succeed Farber.
On June 4, 2007, Governor Corzine nominated Stuart Rabner to serve as Chief Justice of the New Jersey Supreme Court, and nominated Milgram to succeed Rabner as Attorney General.[4] At the conclusion of confirmation hearings, the Senate voted on June 21, 2007, to confirm Rabner as Chief Justice. Milgram was confirmed by a 37–1 Senate vote to succeed Rabner as Attorney General.[5]
Attorney General Milgram has expanded officer's powers regarding illegal immigrants. She told the New Jersey State Police to inform federal authorities when an illegal immigrant is arrested in an indictable crime or for drunk driving. On August 22, 2007, in the wake of a triple-murder in Newark in which previously-arrested illegal immigrants may have been involved, she said that she wanted local, county and state police to hand more serious cases directly to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).[6] The attempt to have local law enforcement officials coordinate with federal authorities is consistent with Section 287(g) of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996. [7][8]
The number of illegal immigrants referred to federal authorities jumped dramatically, in the months after Milgram's order. From September 2007 to February 2008, New Jersey law enforcement entities reported 8,874 illegal immigrants to the ICE center in Vermont. This contrasted with the 4,589 period for the same months a year earlier.[9]
Milgram grew up in East Brunswick Township, New Jersey.[4]
Milgram, member of the Cap and Skull Senior Honor Society, graduated summa cum laude from Rutgers College in 1992 with a degree in English and Political Science. She received a master of philosophy in social and political theory in 1993 from the University of Cambridge and received her J.D. from the New York University School of Law in 1996.[10]
She clerked for United States District Court Judge Anne E. Thompson in Trenton, from 1996 to 1997.[10]
In 1997, Milgram began her career as an assistant district attorney in the New York County District Attorney's as a member of the Domestic Violence Unit. Milgram later worked in the Criminal Section of the Civil Rights Division, United States Department of Justice, where she served as Special Litigation Counsel. Milgram helped to lead the division's human trafficking prosecutions. Milgram was counsel to Jon Corzine during his final year in the United States Senate.[10]
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| Preceded by Zulima Farber |
Attorney General of New Jersey (acting) September 2006 |
Succeeded by Stuart Rabner |
| Preceded by Stuart Rabner |
Attorney General of New Jersey June 29, 2007 - present |
Succeeded by incumbent |
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