Eddie Jack Jordan, Jr. (born 1952), was the
district attorney for
Orleans Parish,
Louisiana from 2003 until 2007, when he resigned. A member of the
Democratic Party, Jordan was the first
African American to have held the elected position. He announced his resignation on October 30, 2007, when a court rendered a large judgment against his office on behalf of white employees that the D.A. had earlier dismissed on account of their race.
Jordan was born to Mr. and Mrs. Eddie J. Jordan, Sr. He grew up in the
middle class Pontchartrain Park neighborhood of the
Ninth Ward of
New Orleans. He graduated from
Wesleyan University in
Middletown, Connecticut in 1974, and was then awarded a
scholarship to the
Rutgers University School of
Law in
New Jersey, from which he graduated in 1977. After being admitted to the bar and practicing in
Pennsylvania for some four years, Jordan returned to Louisiana in 1981 to teach law at
Southern University in
Baton Rouge. He became a member of the Louisiana bar the following year.
In 1984 Jordan returned to New Orleans to serve as assistant U.S. attorney under then-U.S. Attorney
John Volz, a
Republican appointed by
U.S. President Ronald W. Reagan.
In 1994, Jordan he was named
United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Louisiana by his fellow Democrat,
President Bill Clinton. As U.S. Attorney, he supervised the...
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