Asa Hutchinson

Asa Hutchinson
William Asa Hutchinson, Jr.is an American politician who has been the 46th Governor of Arkansas since 2015. Previously he was U.S. Attorney for the Fort Smith-based Western District of Arkansas, U.S. Congressman from the Third District of Arkansas, Administrator of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administrationand the first Undersecretary for Border & Transportation Security at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. In 2006, Hutchinson was the Republican candidate for governor of Arkansas and lost to Democrat Mike Beebe, the outgoing state...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionLawyer
Date of Birth3 December 1950
CountryUnited States of America
These criminals are leaders and mid-level brokers of Internet drug-trafficking rings. They used the World Wide Web as a worldwide drug market.
The story needs to be told, ... The truth needs to be determined.
President Clinton said the options and new thinking offered by charter schools would foster competition and innovation that would make ... all of public schools better, and I agree.
We should have been more careful as far as releasing that,
There's not any Lake View issue here. You have to have standards in the state, but to say you can never adjust those standards is unacceptable.
There's not any evidence that these lasers are being used by terrorists. The FBI certainly continues to investigate and look at these fact scenarios. It's also a safety issue that the Department of Transportation would certainly want to look at.
We do targeted outbound inspections, we look for shipments that would be illegal and we are concerned with that part of the supply chain as well.
we're not aware of any corrections that need to be made on any of our exhibits offered to the Senate.
I think (Oklahoma) has made it a political issue.
You can expect interior enforcement actions in the future.
We do hope that technology will help us to keep at a reasonable level the human resource investment that has to be made.
We can apply this to our post-9/11 environment, ... because we have not lost our idealism, love of freedom, civil liberty, and commerce-but we do have a very practical task. As the president told Attorney General John Ashcroft at the time, 'Do not let this happen to America again.'
We need to learn from their experience. And we need to look in Arkansas at how we can lower the number of uninsured.
For me, this is not a day of fanfare. This is a day of serious resolve for what I believe is a most important position.