Danh ngôn của Janet Reno (Sứ mệnh: 3)

At this moment I do not have a personal relationship with a computer.
I have been surrounded by some of the smartest, brightest, most caring lawyers, by agents who are willing to risk their lives for others, by support staff that are willing to work as hard as they can.
The good lawyer is the great salesman.
I think, clearly, where you have a situation in which the Solicitor General tells me, 'I cannot in good faith argue a certainly legal position,' and if the president told us to argue that position, we would have to tell him, 'No, we can't do that, Mr. President.'
What has too often happened in the past is that people have threatened punishment but have failed to carry it out. It's imperative in any initiative that is undertaken that punishment be real and that there be truth in sentencing, and that the truly dangerous offenders - the recidivists and the career criminals - be put away and kept away.
I think police officers can work with social workers and public health nurses to do so much in terms of addressing the problem of American families, of children in American families as a whole, and giving them an opportunity to get off to a fresh start, to become self-sufficient, to lead safe, constructive lives.
Let us develop an agenda for children that says we can do something about teen pregnancy. Let us make sure that parents are old enough, wise enough, and financially able to take care of their children.
I think lawyers who engage in pro bono service to protect those who cannot help themselves are truly the heroes and the heroines of the legal profession.
Draw great strength from your family and give in turn to those who come after you.
Do and act on what you believe to be right, and you'll wake up the next morning feeling good about yourself.
Being a lawyer is not merely a vocation. It is a public trust, and each of us has an obligation to give back to our communities.
We recognize that violence is a learned behavior. One of the best classrooms for learning violence is in the home.
The keystone to justice is the belief that the legal system treats all fairly.