Barry Ray Grissom is an American attorney who served as the United States Attorney for the District of Kansas from 2010 to 2016. On July 1, 2019, Barry Grissom officially launched his campaign for the Democratic Party nomination for U.S. Senate. On October 17, 2019, he dropped out of the race, and endorsed former Kansas state SenatorBarbara Bollier for the race.
Returning to Kansas, he began a private practice in 1983, focused on representing victims of negligence, on civil rights and labor issues, including Fair Labor Standards Act cases. From 1986 to 2010 he was a member of the board of governors for the Kansas Trial Lawyers Association. He was appointed the U.S. Attorney for Kansas by President Barack Obama in 2010, serving until April 2016, after which he joined the national Polsinelli law firm. He had been a member of Eric Holder's Attorney General's Advisory Committee, as well as becoming a panelist on the Brennan Center's Blue Ribbon Panel on the redefinition of federal prosecution priorities. The panel's report emphasized both targeting violent offenders at the same time addressing issues of over-incarceration. In April 2018, he founded the Grissom Law Group which additionally focused on public policy advocacy. In 2018, he became the Senior Vice President of Electrum Partners.
U.S. Attorney
As the U.S. Attorney for Kansas, Barry Grissom focused on civil rights enforcement and community outreach. During his tenure, Grissom founded the Kansas Civil Rights Symposium, the District's first Human Trafficking Working Group, directed the District's Project Safe Neighborhood program, and oversaw the District's Project Safe Childhood program. During his tenure as US Attorney, various subordinates kept recordings of attorney-client phone calls of inmates in a detention facility. The US District Court found the office to be in contempt of court. A number of convictions and/or cases have been reversed or abandoned due to this unconstitutional activity. Grissom claimed to be unaware.
2020 U.S. Senate campaign
During his tenure as US Attorney, various subordinates kept recordings of attorney-client phone calls of inmates in a detention facility. The US District Court found the office to be in contempt of court. A number of convictions and/or cases have been reversed or abandoned due to this unconstitutional activity. Grissom claimed to be unaware, and the US District Court didn't refer to Grissom specifically in their ruling. Despite this, both Democrats and Republicans nonetheless criticised Grissom on this issue.