Governor Martin Oโ€™Malley, joined by Maryland State Police Colonel Terrence B. Sheridan and Maryland Attorney General Doug Gansler, announced today that former Attorney General Stephen H. Sachs will head an independent review to look into intelligence gathering activities of the Maryland State Police in 2005 and 2006.ย  Sachs served as Marylandโ€™s 40th Attorney General.ย 

โ€œThe State Police have an obligation to take seriously and investigate all potential threats to public safety consistent with state and federal law,โ€ said Governor Oโ€™Malley.ย  โ€œBut when those intelligence-gathering operations impact the First Amendment rights of individuals, we have a responsibility to investigate the scope and breadth of these intelligence-gathering activities.ย  I am proud that Attorney General Sachs has agreed to oversee this independent review working with the full cooperation of the Maryland State Police.โ€

โ€œI want to thank the Governor for having confidence in my ability and will do my best to perform the tasks set before me,โ€ said Attorney General Sachs. โ€œI have no pre-judgment and very little knowledge of the activities that have been reported.ย  I share the goals of the Governor to discover the unvarnished truth of the matter, to ensure that the citizens of Maryland are able to pursue their interests including expression of opinion and the exercise of their constitutional rights and to ensure that law enforcement is able and empowered to perform its legitimate public safety functions, and to guarantee public confidence in the integrity and the probity of the Maryland State Police.โ€ย 

โ€œThe Maryland State Police will cooperate fully with this review and make certain Sachs is provided all the information he needs,โ€ Colonel Terrence B. Sheridan said.ย  โ€œWe remain committed to upholding the rights of all the people we serve as we work diligently to reduce violent crime and make Maryland safer.โ€

โ€œI support the Governorโ€™s decision to seek a thorough, independent review of the activities of the State Police during 2005 and 2006 that have recently come to light,โ€ said Attorney General Gansler.ย  โ€œThe Governor could not have chosen a better person to undertake this review than Steve Sachs and my Office will provide General Sachs any assistance he needs in this important effort.โ€

Sachs is a graduate of Haverford College where he received his Bachelor of Arts in 1954.ย  In 1960, he received a law degree from Yale University.ย  He also attended New College, Oxford University from 1954 to 1955 on a Fulbright Scholarship. Following graduation from law school, he clerked for Judge Henry Edgerton of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit for a year.ย 

Sachs served as Assistant U.S. Attorney (Maryland) from 1961 to 1964.ย  Later that year, he joined the firm of Tydings, Rosenberg & Gallagher. In 1967, he was appointed as U.S. Attorney for the District of Maryland, a position he held until 1970 when he returned to private practice.ย  In 1979, he became Marylandโ€™s 40th Attorney General and was re-elected in 1982.ย  Sachs joined Wilmer Cutler Pickering as a partner in 1987.ย  He specialized in criminal and civil litigation, until his retirement on Decemberย 31, 1999.ย  He is now of counsel to the Firm.ย  He also frequently serves as an arbitrator in domestic and international commercial disputes.

Sachs is a Fellow of The American College of Trial Lawyers.ย  He is a member of the American Bar Association