Chicago Sun-Times

TRUMP MAKES CHICAGO U. S. ATTORNEY PICK

Panel created by Duckworth, Durbin to screen president’s nominee

- BY JON SEIDEL AND LYNN SWEET Staff Reporters

The Trump White House has sent its pick to fill the vacant U. S. Attorney seat in Chicago, former prosecutor John Lausch, to a panel created by Illinois Democratic Senators Dick Durbin and Tammy Duckworth for screening.

Trump will nominate Lausch if he passes muster with the screening committee Durbin and Duckworth created to help fill the Northern District of Illinois top prosecutor’s vacancy.

Though Republican­s control the Senate and White House, Senate tradition gives home state senators the power to block a nominee from advancing to the Senate Judiciary Committee, which gives Durbin and Duckworth a pivotal role in the selection process.

Lausch, a partner at Kirkland & Ellis LLP, worked as a federal prosecutor in Chicago for more than 11 years and served as a supervisor in the U. S. attorney’s office between 2005 and 2010. He tried more than 20 criminal jury cases and led the prosecutio­n of several corrupt cops about 10 years ago.

Lausch also once served as the violent crime coordinato­r in the U. S. attorney’s office and led the Anti- Gang and Project Safe Neighborho­ods programs — clearly valuable experience for a top fed candidate at a time when officials have struggled to get a handle on the bloodshed in Chicago. In fact, the clearest criteria officials have articulate­d for the next U. S. attorney is someone who will “root out corruption and stop the violence in Chicago.”

Lausch now specialize­s in government enforcemen­t defense and internal investigat­ions at Kirkland. He represente­d BP in litigation related to the Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion, and he has led confidenti­al internal investigat­ions for companies revolving around health care fraud, environmen­tal crimes and the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

Lausch also interviewe­d for the U. S. attorney job five years ago. But Zachary Fardon was ultimately chosen to replace former U. S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald. Fardon held the job for more than three years before U. S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions asked 46 U. S. attorneys appointed under former President Barack Obama’s administra­tion to resign. Fardon was one of them.

The U. S. Attorney’s office in Chicago has now been led for more than three months by acting U. S. Attorney Joel Levin. The other candidates considered to permanentl­y replace Fardon included Michael Scudder and Andrew Porter, sources have said.

 ?? | KIRKLAND& ELLIS PHOTO ?? John Lausch
| KIRKLAND& ELLIS PHOTO John Lausch

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