The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fired U.S. attorney replaced by longtime friend in N.Y.

Colleagues say work will continue to ‘hum along.’

- By Jake Pearson

NEW YORK — Preet Bharara, the high-profile federal prosecutor who was fired by President Donald Trump’s administra­tion after refusing to resign, has been replaced temporaril­y by a longtime friend and top adviser.

Joon H. Kim, 45, who had previously served as Bharara’s chief counsel, criminal division head and top deputy, will be acting U.S. attorney in the Southern District of New York until Trump nominates a candidate for the job who can be confirmed by the Senate. That process could take months.

In the meantime, Kim, the son of a South Korean diplomat who came up through the ranks of the U.S. attorney’s office in Manhattan prosecutin­g organized crime and terrorism cases with his old boss, isn’t likely to stop pursuing the kinds of cases that have made the Manhattan prosecutor’s office known for its reach and breadth, former colleagues say.

“I think things will continue to hum along,” said Lev Dassin, who served as acting U.S. attorney in Manhattan for eight months beginning in December 2008 after Michael Garcia resigned.

Kim’s promotion comes after a public confrontat­ion between the Trump administra­tion and Bharara, 48, who was asked to resign last week with 45 other prosecutor­s appointed during President Barack Obama’s administra­tion. Bharara had said in November that Trump assured him that the job was his to keep.

A spokesman for the prosecutor’s office didn’t respond to a request for an interview.

Kim’s former colleagues said there was no reason to believe he would pursue existing cases any differentl­y following Bharara’s high-profile departure.

“The nice thing here is that Preet and Joon have been working together for quite a while,” said Jennifer Rodgers, the executive director of the Center for the Advancemen­t of Public Integrity at Columbia Law School. Rodgers once worked with Kim on a case against Peter J. Gotti, a son of the late Gambino crime boss John Gotti Jr.

Sharp and self-deprecatin­g, Kim puts people at ease with a regular-guy look and ability to explain even the most complex of issues in everyman terms, colleagues say.

“He is one of the funniest guys I’ve ever met in my life,” said Michael McGovern, who tried a host of cases against the Gambinos with Kim, including two hung-jury cases against John Gotti Jr.

“Even in the toughest of cases, when either at the end of the day or while the jury is deliberati­ng, we’re sitting there in the trial room, sometimes late into the evening, he’d have me just bent over laughing,” McGovern said.

In 2009, when South Korea reformed its judicial system, the country asked Kim to come and train its prosecutor­s, said Victor Hou, who worked with Kim both in government and private practice.

A graduate of Phillips Exeter Academy, Stanford and Harvard Law School, Kim worked in the federal prosecutor’s office from 2000 to 2006 before he joined the Manhattan firm Cleary Gottlieb, where he helped defend Citibank against charges of manipulati­ng interest rates.

 ?? LARRY NEUMEISTER / AP ?? Former U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Preet Bharara, walks down a line of applauding wellwisher­s Monday in New York, where he worked until he was fired by President Donald Trump.
LARRY NEUMEISTER / AP Former U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Preet Bharara, walks down a line of applauding wellwisher­s Monday in New York, where he worked until he was fired by President Donald Trump.

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