Name Brendan Johnson | Succeeded by Randy Seiler | |
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Alma mater University of South DakotaUniversity of Virginia Parents Barbara Brooks, Tim Johnson Siblings Kelsey Johnson, Brooks Johnson People also search for Tim Johnson, Kelsey Johnson, Brooks Johnson |
Brendan johnson i see blue
Brendan Van Johnson (born June 24, 1975) is an American attorney and 40th United States Attorney for the District of South Dakota. He is currently a partner in the at Robins Kaplan LLP, a business litigation group.
Contents
- Brendan johnson i see blue
- Brendan johnson away so far
- Early life and education
- Early career
- US Attorney for the District of South Dakota
- Native American Issues
- Human trafficking
- Personal life
- References

Brendan johnson away so far
Early life and education

Johnson is the second son of United States Senator Tim Johnson, and his wife, Barbara (née Brooks) Johnson. Born in Vermillion, South Dakota, he moved with his family to Washington, D.C. after his father was elected to Congress in 1986. In high school, he received all district honors in football and excelled as a wrestler.
He later returned to Vermillion to attend the University of South Dakota where he was selected for the Harry S. Truman Scholarship. Brendan went on to attend the University of Virginia School of Law where he was president of the Student Bar Association and a member of the Raven Honor Society.
Early career
Johnson moved to Hill City, South Dakota, after graduating from law school to serve as a law clerk to South Dakota Chief Federal Judge Karen Schreier. He later moved to Minnehaha County, South Dakota and became a prosecutor for that county. In this capacity he prosecuted a number of cases, including the case of an individual who received two life sentences without parole and 145 years in state prison for the attempted murders of two Sioux Falls Police Officers.
Johnson later became a partner in the law firm known as Johnson, Heidepriem, Janklow, Abdallah and Johnson.
U.S. Attorney for the District of South Dakota
Johnson was nominated by President Barack Obama to be the 40th United States Attorney for the District of South Dakota and was unanimously confirmed by the United States Senate on October 15, 2009. On March 13, 2015, Johnson stepped down as U.S. Attorney for the District of South Dakota.
His nomination to be United States Attorney was supported by several prominent Republicans, including former Governor Bill Janklow, former State Attorney General Larry Long, former Sioux Falls Mayor Dave Munson, and a variety of state and local law enforcement leaders.
In 2009, the Attorney General of the United States selected Johnson to serve as chairman of the Native American Issues Subcommittee. Two years later the Attorney General selected Johnson to serve on the Attorney's General Advisory Committee. Johnson is a member of the Terrorism and National Security Subcommittee.
As South Dakota’s chief federal law enforcement officer, Johnson's office prosecuted several high-profile child exploitation cases, including the case of an individual who received a life sentence for the human trafficking of minors. He also convened the first statewide Tribal Listening Session, a statewide civil rights conference, and has been an outspoken advocate on violence against women issues.
Native American Issues
Johnson increased his office's focus on Native American issues. He worked the night shift with tribal police officers, conducted leadership training for Native American youth, and implemented a new statewide community based prosecution strategy. His focus resulted in an increase in prosecutions. Some of his office's high-profile prosecutions include a 17-person drug conspiracy in Pine Ridge known as Operation Prairie Thunder.
Johnson and his counterpart in North Dakota, former U.S. Attorney Tim Purdon, were known as the “Dakota Boys” within the Justice Department and together they focused on improving public safety in tribal communities across the country. Richard Hartunian, U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of New York, said "the efforts of the Dakota Boys were a turning point in U.S.-Tribal relations ... Brendan and Tim were the right leaders at the right time to carry out the vision of President Obama and Attorney General Holder to improve public safety in Indian Country". Purdon and Johnson joined the law firm of Robins and Kaplan together and now work together on behalf of tribes in private practice.
Human trafficking
As United States Attorney, Johnson oversaw the prosecution of more than 25 human trafficking cases in five years, including three life-sentences and the federal prosecution of numerous men who attempted to purchase sex from trafficking victims. He pursued the case of United States v. Jungers through the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals, securing the critical decision that buyers of sex acts with minors are committing crimes of sex trafficking under the federal law, upping the risk of such activity by those who drive the sex trafficking markets.
In 2014, Johnson received Shared Hope International’s Pathbreaker Award for determined leadership in combatting child sex trafficking: “Brendan Johnson is a force of determination, initiative and skill that should leave buyers terrified to purchase sex with a minor in South Dakota,” Shared Hope International President and Founder Linda Smith said. “By creating a threshold for buyer accountability, he sets a national precedent that, if applied, will make significant strides in reducing tolerance for purchasing sex with a minor.”
Personal life
Brendan Johnson is married to Dr. Jana Beddow Johnson who graduated from Mayo Medical School and was Chief Resident of the Harvard Dermatology program. They have four children.