New York Post

Ex-SEC chief joins Apollo Global board

- Thornton McEnery

Apollo Global is getting a big name to fix its big problem.

The private equity giant on Thursday named former Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Jay Clayton as its lead independen­t director as the firm continues to reckon with the fallout from founder Leon Black’s ties to Jeffrey Epstein.

An independen­t investigat­ion at the $455 billion firm revealed in January that billionair­e Black paid the sex criminal — who committed suicide in prison in August 2019 — $158 million between 2013 and 2017 for profession­al advice on tax audits, wealth management and estate planning.

Since Epstein had no formal legal or financial training, that explanatio­n left legal experts scratching their heads. Black, 69, announced that he will step down as CEO in July but will neverthele­ss remain the chairman of Apollo’s board.

Clayton, 54, left the SEC in December and will return to the white-shoe law firm Sullivan & Cromwell, where he was a partner representi­ng clients like Goldman Sachs before Donald Trump tapped him to be Wall Street’s top sheriff.

Lead independen­t directors often act as something of a check on the chairman of a corporate board, giving shareholde­rs a voice and keeping an eye on how the chairman executes his duties.

Reports swirled in January that Black’s co-founders Josh Harris and

Marc Rowan had pushed for Black to leave the firm entirely in the wake of the Epstein revelation­s, but that a tense agreement was reached in which Rowan would take over as chief but let Black stay on as chairman.

Black said Thursday that he welcomes Clayton’s addition to Apollo. “I am pleased to welcome Jay Clayton as lead independen­t director of Apollo,” Black said in a statement.

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