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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=93TT0132>
<title>
July 12, 1993: Interview:Janet Reno
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
July 12, 1993 Reno:The Real Thing
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
COVER, Page 24
"Those Kids Are So Eager"
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Elaine Shannon and Janet Reno
</p>
<p> Last Friday Time correspondent Elaine Shannon interviewed Janet
Reno in the office at the Justice Department:
</p>
<p> Q. Were you urged to tone down your remarks during confirmation
to be more politically acceptable to the middle?
</p>
<p> A. A lot of people had different advice on how I should handle
confirmation hearings, and I said basically that I had to be
myself. I talked about the things I cared about.
</p>
<p> Q. Some mid-level people at the White House have been criticizing
you privately about being too liberal.
</p>
<p> A. Those kids are so eager, and they like to talk in labels.
But they haven't been involved in prosecutor's offices and worked
on the streets, and understood how you have to have enough prison
cells to punish people for the length of time the judges are
sentencing them, and develop alternative sanctions as well.
</p>
<p> Q. They say you shouldn't have brought up your criticism of
mandatory sentencing so early, because that is viewed as soft
on crime.
</p>
<p> A. What we're faced with in America now is that the dangerous
offenders are getting out because other offenders are in ((prison))
on minimum mandatories for nonviolent offenses. What we all
have to do is use our prison cells to house the truly dangerous
offenders, the major traffickers, the major distributors. In
other words, we need to have a punishment that fits the crime.
We've got to have alternative sentences. We've got to explore
preventative programs.
</p>
<p> Q. Are you trying to build a consensus on this? Is that why
you're making so many speeches?
</p>
<p> A. One of the things I tried to do as state attorney was to
be accessible, not to be remote, not to close my door. I think
it's important that people feel that the Attorney General can
be accessible to them so that she knows what's happening on
the streets of America and not just what's happening in the
halls of the Department of Justice.
</p>
<p> Q. You advised your Justice employees not to be demagogic. Do
you think there's been too much demagoguery on the drug issue?
</p>
<p> A. I think it's important that we look not with labels, not
with shorthand terms, not with partisan politics but with good,
hard-nosed common sense, that we make sure we fund what we think
can work so that we don't do it halfway.
</p>
<p> Q. How much clout are you having on appointments?
</p>
<p> A. I'm having a lot of clout.
</p>
<p> Q. Some people have said that [informal Clinton adviser] Susan
Thomases or Hillary Clinton seems to have chosen a lot of the
appointments.
</p>
<p> A. When I was nominated, I was told that the White House had
some people they wanted in position. I said, "Well, I'm not
going to be able to live with that if I don't particularly care
for somebody or if I want somebody." They said, "We'll work
it out." And I've been entirely satisfied ever since. I'm not
trying to do anything except give the President the best advice
I can give him. So far, he's been very receptive to it.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>