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Gonzales, Alberto R.

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Alberto Gonzales Summary

Alberto R. Gonzales. [Credit: U.S. Department of Justice]Alberto R. Gonzales. [Credit: U.S. Department of Justice]

(born Aug. 4, 1955, San Antonio, Texas, U.S.) American lawyer, judge, and attorney general of the United States (2005–07), the first Hispanic to occupy the post.

Gonzales, the son of Mexican migrant workers who spoke little English, was raised in Houston, Texas. After graduating from high school, he joined the U.S. Air Force (1973) and then studied at the U.S. Air Force Academy (1975–77).

He received a bachelor's degree in political science in 1979 from Rice University and then attended Harvard University, where he earned a law degree in 1982. That year he joined a private law firm in Houston, where he practiced business law for 13 years.

In 1995 Gonzales became legal counsel to Texas Governor George W. Bush, and he later served as Texas secretary of state (1997–99) and as a justice on the Texas Supreme Court (1999–2001). After Bush became president in 2001, Gonzales joined him in Washington, D.C., as White House counsel. One of Bush's most trusted legal advisers, Gonzales helped author the USA Patriot Act, the federal legislation enacted in October 2001 in response to the September 11 terrorist attacks. The act broadened the powers of law enforcement but met with opposition from civil libertarians. Gonzales's legal opinions sometimes provoked controversy; for example, in 2003, following a scandal involving U.S. military personnel at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq during the Iraq War, he was criticized for his legal opinion that prisoners suspected of terrorist activity did not merit protection under the Geneva Conventions. Nevertheless, he was nominated by Bush for the post of attorney general in 2004 and confirmed (60–36) by the U.S. Senate the following year. In 2007 he again became the focus of controversy—and a target of investigation—when it was alleged that his dismissal in 2006 of eight federal prosecutors was politically motivated. Also in 2007, both Democrats and Republicans questioned the veracity of his testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee regarding his role in the Bush administration's initiation of a secret electronic surveillance program aimed at the threat of terrorism. Faced with the growing controversy, Gonzales announced his resignation in August 2007 and left office the following month.

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