The top federal prosecutor in Philadelphia said Thursday he will step down next week when President Donald Trump leaves office.
The 3 foods that GROW cancer [sponsored]
U.S. Attorney William McSwain, a Trump appointee, plans to return to private practice.
McSwain sparred frequently during his tenure with Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner, an advocate of criminal justice reform.
McSwain pursued federal charges against Black Lives Matters activists who clashed with police during summer protests, blamed Krasner’s progressive policies for an uptick in gun violence, and fought plans for a nonprofit group to open a medically supervised drug injection site.
And he rarely minced words.
When a federal appeals court ruled this week that the proposed drug injection clinic, aimed at reducing the city’s grim rate of overdose deaths, would run afoul of federal drug laws, McSwain cheered that Philadelphia would not become “the birthplace of heroin injection sites.”
Eerie WW2 Photo Reveals Shocking Secret [sponsored]
McSwain has led the office since April 2018. First Assistant U.S. Attorney Jennifer Arbittier Williams will step into the job until President-elect Joe Biden names a replacement.
The Associated Press contributed to this article