The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga. attorney among candidates for FBI job

A former prosecutor in Atlanta, Wray worked in Justice Department.

- By Rhonda Cook rcook@ajc.com

A former Atlanta federal prosecutor — who was also a top Justice Department official before going into private practice law — is one of two additional candidates to replace ousted former FBI director James Comey.

On Tuesday, Chris Wray, a litigation partner with King & Spalding who has served as New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s personal attorney, met with President Donald Trump. The second candidate for FBI chief, John Pistole, is a veteran of the bureau, a former Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion director and current president of Anderson University in Indiana.

“(Wray) has an absolute reputation for integrity. I think he’s a great candidate,” said Kent Alexander, a former U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Georgia who hired Wray 20 years ago.

White House spokesman Sean Spicer declined to provide a short list to replace Comey, who was fired in early May as the FBI investigat­ed ties between the Trump campaign and Russia. Spicer told reporters that when Trump “feels as though he’s met with the right candidate he’ll let us know.” He said the president would continue to meet with candidates “until he finds the right leader.”

Though Wray is now in private practice, he spent about a decade as a federal prosecutor — including four years in the U.S. Attorney’s office based in Atlanta — before moving to the DO J in 2001, where he was part of the response to the 9/11 attacks and the subsequent legal and operationa­l oversight of the U.S. war on terrorism.

That was when Joe Whitley, another former federal prosecutor in Atlanta, met Wray. In 2002, Whitley was special counsel to the thennew Department of Homeland Security, and Wray was assigned to the 9/11 investigat­ion. “Chris is a very capable, a very smart attorney,” Whitley said.

Wray’s profession­al background is like the histories of previous FBI directors, Whitley said.

William Webster, for example, had been a federal prosecutor in Missouri and then a federal judge when he resigned from the Eighth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in 1978 when President Jimmy Carter named him the FBI’s third director. Whitley noted that all the FBI directors who followed also had spent time as a federal prosecutor or on the federal bench.

Wray has similar experience, which equips him for the position, Whitley said.

“Chris understand­s the culture and what the apparatus requires in terms of leadership,” Whitley said. “This is going to be a different time at the bureau, and it’s going to be more of a challenge. It’s going to require a lot of staying power, and he has it.”

Wray, a 1992 graduate of Yale University Law School, was a law clerk for a judge on the Fourth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. In 1997, he became a federal prosecutor in Atlanta before joining the DO J.

In 2003, the U.S. Senate unanimousl­y confirmed him as assistant attorney general over the DO J’s criminal division, which at that time was focusing on corporate fraud such as the investigat­ion into the accounting practices at Enron Corp., a Houston-based energy and commoditie­s company.

Wray returned to Atlanta in 2005 to take a job with private firm King & Spalding. As a litigation partner in the firm’s Washington and Atlanta offices, he represente­d New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie during the investigat­ion into the George Washington Bridge lane-closing case. Two Christie aides were eventually convicted of plotting to close lanes of the bridge to punish a Democratic mayor who wouldn’t endorse the governor. Christie, who has informally advised the president, was not charged in the case.

Wray also led internal investigat­ions by major health care, energy and telecommun­ications corporatio­ns that were at the time subject to federal regulatory or criminal probes.

“He provides a quiet leadership,” Whitley said, adding that Wray would be able to maintain the independen­ce of the FBI even in a highly-politicize­d climate.

 ??  ?? Chris Wray is a litigation partner with King & Spalding who has served as New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s personal attorney.
Chris Wray is a litigation partner with King & Spalding who has served as New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s personal attorney.

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