James H. Jim Brown Politician

James Harvey "Jim" Brown, Jr. (born May 6, 1940), is a political consultant and political commentator based in Baton Rouge long active in Louisiana Democratic politics. In 1972, he was elected to both the Louisiana state Senate, to which he served two terms, and to the 1973 Constitutional Convention. He was secretary of state from 1980 to 1988, and he ran unsuccessfully for governor in the 1987 jungle primary. He was elected insurance commissioner in 1991 and served until his resignation in October 2000. Brown's political career closed with a six-month prison sentence for lying to the Federal Bureau of Investigation about the status of an insurance company. In 2004, Brown wrote a book entitled Justice Denied: How the Federal Justice System Failed Former Insurance Commissioner Jim Brown, seeking to refute the charges of which he was convicted in federal court and to rehabilitate his reputation. Brown was barred from practicing law until at least the end of 2006. On September 30, 2008, the Louisiana Supreme Court reinstated his right to resume his legal practice. Brown's daughter, Campbell Brown (born June 14, 1968), is a CNN news anchor and former co-anchor of NBC's Weekend Today and a former network White House correspondent and is married to Daniel Samuel "Dan" Senor (born 1971), a Republican political consultant to President George W. Bush Administration who appears regularly on Fox News in Washington, D.C.

Personal facts

Alias (AKA)Jim Brown
Birth dateMay 06, 1940
Birth place
Louisiana , Concordia Parish Louisiana , Ferriday Louisiana
Religion
Presbyterianism
Education
University of North Carolina
Tulane University Law School
Spouse
Vidalia Louisiana
Children
Journalist

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