John Doar

John Michael Doar (born December 3, 1921, in Minneapolis, Minnesota) is an American lawyer and currently senior counsel with the law firm Doar Rieck Kaley & Mack in New York.

He served as First Assistant and then Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights in the U.S. Dept. of Justice, from 1960 to 1967, during which time he was involved in several of the most significant events of the American civil rights movement. In 1962, Doar confronted Ross Barnett over Barnett's attempts to prevent James Meredith from entering the then-segregated University of Mississippi. He also prosecuted and convicted Collie Leroy Wilkins for federal civil rights violations in the murder of Viola Liuzzo, before an all-white jury in Alabama. As a federal prosecutor Doar could not prosecute someone for murder, which was a state offense. In 1963, Doar confronted and calmed an angry mob after the murder of Medgar Evers.

He prosecuted the federal case for civil rights violations against the people who were accused of lynching Andrew Goodman, James Chaney and Michael Schwerner, in events which were later depicted in the movie Mississippi Burning. Doar later contributed to drafting the Civil Rights Act of 1965, which Lyndon Johnson signed in an attempt to solve some of the problems that he had observed in the deep south.

He left the government in the later part of the Johnson administration, returning only in 1974 as Chief Counsel for the United States House Committee on the Judiciary, which was then investigating the Watergate scandal and preparing articles of impeachment against Richard Nixon.

Doar is a graduate of Princeton University (A.B. 1944) and the University of California-Berkeley Boalt Hall School of Law (LL.B. 1949). His son, Robert Doar is Commissioner of the New York City Human Resources Administration.

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