Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

‘She masters the facts of everything’

Strauss emerges as acting US attorney after Trump firing

- By Benjamin Weiser, Nicole Hong and Ben Protess The New York Times

NEW YORK — One Friday afternoon in August 2018, lawyers for President Donald Trump’s longtime fixer, Michael Cohen, made a final bid for leniency to federal prosecutor­s in Manhattan. He was facing charges including that he paid hush money on Trump’s behalf to an adult film star during the 2016 campaign.

Audrey Strauss, one of two senior prosecutor­s in the room, listened silently to the pitch, smiling at the lawyers but letting others do the talking, people familiar with the meeting said. Over the next few days, however, Strauss played a key role in the momentous decision to proceed against Cohen, a move that infuriated the White House.

Now, Strauss, a 72-yearold former defense lawyer known for her understate­d style, has been forced into the spotlight, taking over as the acting U.S. attorney in the storied prosecutor’s office, which continues to find itself in the president’s cross hairs. She will lead politicall­y sensitive investigat­ions into people in Trump’s orbit in the run-up to the Nov. 3 election, and her decisions will be scrutinize­d.

Strauss’ appointmen­t happened with dizzying speed.

In the span of 24 chaotic hours this weekend, Trump and his attorney general, William Barr, had tried to oust her boss, Geoffrey Berman, and replace him with one of Barr’s allies.

When Berman initially refused to step down, the plan fell apart.

Trump ended up firing

Berman on Saturday, leaving

Strauss — Berman’s top deputy — to emerge from the wreckage as the office’s new leader.

In that role, she will oversee a number of investigat­ions that have upset the president, including the inquiry into whether Rudy Giuliani, Trump’s lawyer, broke lobbying laws in his dealings in Ukraine.

During the last two years as a top supervisor in the Southern District of New York, Strauss has become known for taking a more cautious approach than some of her predecesso­rs when weighing charging decisions, former colleagues said. She spent three decades as a defense lawyer facing off against prosecutor­s in white-collar cases, they said, and she is attuned to holes in the government’s evidence.

Her approach — distilling arguments, weighing the evidence and then ruling decisively — was evident in discussion­s over the Cohen case and is typical for Strauss, according to lawyers who have worked with her for decades.

Longtime friends say Strauss, a registered Democrat, is unlikely to be influenced by political motives.

“She is totally nonpolitic­al in her decision-making process,” said Jed Rakoff, a federal judge in Manhattan who worked with Strauss in the U.S. attorney’s office in the 1970s and later at two private law firms.

“I’ve never met anyone who is more immune to the passions of the moment,” said Rakoff, who officiated the wedding of Strauss’ son.

Strauss becomes the second woman to lead the Southern District in the office’s 230-year history after Mary Jo White, who led the office from 1993 to 2002.

“She masters the facts of everything she ever does,” White said of Strauss. “She figures out how everything fits into the picture, and she’s not satisfied until she knows everything she can possibly know.”

Barr had announced that the president intended to nominate Jay Clayton, head of the Securities and Exchange Commission, as Berman’s permanent replacemen­t.

But Strauss is likely to remain the acting U.S. attorney until at least the election.

The Senate goes out of session in August and is unlikely to hold a nomination hearing for any permanent replacemen­t before November.

Barr had initially announced in a news release Friday night that Craig Carpenito, the U.S. attorney in New Jersey, would become the acting head in the Southern District.

But the decision caused an uproar.

Berman refused to step down until Saturday, when

Strauss was named instead as his temporary replacemen­t.

When Berman took over as U.S. attorney in 2018, he brought Strauss out of retirement to become his senior counsel and later his deputy. She had worked as a Southern District prosecutor from 1976 to 1983, trying more than 20 cases and rising to chief of criminal appeals and, later, the securities fraud unit.

Strauss and Berman have known each other for at least three decades. They worked together in the late 1980s on the independen­t counsel’s investigat­ion into the Iran-Contra scandal.

“She is the smartest, most principled and effective lawyer with whom I have ever had the privilege of working,” Berman said Saturday when he announced he would leave the office.

Strauss’ husband, John “Rusty” Wing, a white-collar defense lawyer, is a registered Republican, according to the most recent records from the New York state Board of Elections. Their son, who previously worked as Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s press secretary, is married to a senior aide to Cuomo.

Campaign finance records show that Strauss is a longtime donor to Democratic candidates, including Hillary Clinton’s presidenti­al campaign in 2007 and Barack Obama’s reelection campaign in 2012. She contribute­d in 2006 to Joe Biden’s presidenti­al campaign.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, RS.C., praised Strauss, saying she was “widely viewed as a highly competent, highly capable deputy U.S. attorney with the knowledge and experience to hit the ground running.”

On Friday, Graham, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, had signaled that he would allow New York’s Democratic senators to block Trump’s first choice, Clayton, to replace Berman.

Lisa Zornberg, a former chief of the Southern District’s criminal division, said Strauss was an inspiratio­n to younger lawyers, particular­ly women. Strauss once invited the office’s female prosecutor­s to her home in Brooklyn and talked proudly about how it had once been owned by one of the first female physicians in the borough.

“She’s a person of vast intellect and experience from every angle as a lawyer,” Zornberg said.

Strauss was born and raised in Philadelph­ia with an older brother, who retired from NASA, having been a doctor for astronauts, according to people who know her.

Her parents were the children of Russian immigrants — a shoe salesman and a stay-at-home mother — and they died when she was young. Family friends took her in and made her part of their family; they remain close to this day.

 ?? HIROKO MASUIKE/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Geoffrey Berman calls Audrey Strauss the most “effective lawyer with whom I have ever had the privilege of working.”
HIROKO MASUIKE/THE NEW YORK TIMES Geoffrey Berman calls Audrey Strauss the most “effective lawyer with whom I have ever had the privilege of working.”
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