Returning U.S. Attorney Andrew Luger is pledging to use federal law enforcement to curb Minnesota's still surging violent crime, vowing to roll out a series of new measures in the coming weeks to address it.
In his first interview with the Star Tribune since being sworn back into the office he led from 2014 to 2017, Luger said he plans to roll out a new strategy to counter gun violence and carjacking. The rash of violence is unlike anything the veteran prosecutor encountered during his first term, which was known more for terrorism prosecutions and the discovery of Jacob Wetterling's remains 27 years after the boy's disappearance.
"We as a society disagree about a lot of things but the message that I received from everyone I talked to without exception was one of unity around the need to address violent crime," Luger said of preparing to return to office. "Violence affects everybody, and fear of violence affects everyone."
Luger is returning to his roots as a federal prosecutor — a career that started in 1989 in New York City. His first term as U.S. attorney under Democratic President Barack Obama ended soon after Republican Donald Trump's inauguration in 2017 when the Trump administration ordered all Obama holdovers to step down.
Now, the 62-year-old Luger is coming back in the twilight of his legal career after working in private practice for Jones Day in Minneapolis. He will take over an office of 130 employees and more than 65 attorneys, many of whom were hired since Luger left the office.
Luger resumes his role at a time when all of the local divisions of federal law enforcement agencies such as the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) also are being led by unfamiliar faces since his last stint as U.S. attorney.
"Because of the urgency of the violent crime problem in Minnesota we are all getting to know each other very quickly," said Luger, who will take part in a formal ceremony Thursday to usher in his new term. "We don't have months to learn about each other, we have days and weeks at most to coordinate, collaborate and build our strategy going forward."
In preparing his response, Luger is looking at strategies deployed by nonprofits such as Cure Violence Global, which trains "violence interrupters and outreach workers" to prevent bloodshed in communities worldwide. He also is considering turning to a federal violence prevention program for youth called Project BUILD or ramping up with the group violence intervention program led by the city of Minneapolis.