Janet Reno: First Woman Attorney General

Janet Reno was born in Miami but destined for the national stage. The child of two journalists, she distinguished herself early, graduating from Harvard Law School in 1963, one of 16 women among more than 500 men. She became the state attorney for what was then called Dade County in 1978 at age 39, running an office of 500 people. But it was her stint as the country’s first female U.S. attorney general – she served under President Bill Clinton starting in 1993 – that brought her the most public scrutiny. Weeks into the new job,  she ordered a deadly raid on the Branch Davidians in Waco, Texas. During her tenure, she sentenced to death Timothy McVeigh, the Oklahoma City bomber. She sent federal agents to take 6-year-old Elian Gonzalez from the home of his Miami relatives and return him to his father in Cuba. And she put the Unabomber, Theodore Kaczynski, behind bars. At times, she poked fun at herself, appearing in the final installment of a recurring Saturday Night Live skit called Janet Reno’s Dance Party. In 2001, she returned to the cypress-and-brick home built by her mother in the 1940s in Kendall and ran an unsuccessful campaign for governor in 2002. Reno, who had Parkinson’s disease, passed away on November 7, 2016.

 

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