http://edition.cnn.com/2017/06/07/politics/christopher-wray-fbi-director/index.html

Trump to nominate Christopher Wray as FBI director:
CNN Digital Expansion 2017

By Jeremy Diamond and Laura Jarrett, CNN
Updated 1640 GMT (0040 HKT) June 7, 2017

[Video]

Story highlights
Wray headed up the Justice Department's criminal division from 2003 to 2005
The announcement caps off several tumultuous weeks since Trump
suddenly fired Comey

Washington (CNN)President Donald Trump announced Wednesday he plans to
nominate Christopher A. Wray, the former assistant attorney general in
charge of the Justice Department's criminal division, to be the next
FBI director.

Trump's announcement comes one day before former FBI Director James
Comey, whom Trump fired last month, is set to testify in a bombshell
hearing before the Senate.
"I will be nominating Christopher A. Wray, a man of impeccable
credentials, to be the new Director of the FBI. Details to follow,"
Trump tweeted Wednesday morning.
Sessions not stepping down, department says

Sessions not stepping down, department says 01:33
Wray headed up the Justice Department's criminal division from 2003 to
2005 under President George W. Bush and is currently a litigation
partner at the DC-based law firm King & Spalding, where he chairs the
firm's Special Matters and Government Investigations Practice Group.
5 things to watch: Coats, Rogers, McCabe and Rosenstein testify
5 things to watch: Coats, Rogers, McCabe and Rosenstein testify
He also represented New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie during the
"Bridgegate" investigation into lane closures at the George Washington
Bridge. Last week, Christie told the Bergen Record that Trump "would
not be making a mistake" were he to tap Wray to lead the FBI.
"Chris Wray is an extraordinary person, possessing all the gifts
necessary to be a great director of the FBI," Attorney General Jeff
Sessions said in a statement. "I congratulate President Trump for
choosing a leader of proven skill, independence, and integrity, a man
in whom all Americans can have confidence. "
Announced on eve of Comey testimony
The sudden announcement cuts into a bubbling news cycle about tensions
between Trump and Sessions, who in recent weeks told Trump he would be
willing to resign, a senior administration official confirmed to CNN
on Tuesday.
The timing could also be aimed at blunting the impact of Comey's
testimony before the Senate intelligence committee on Thursday. Comey
is expected to refute Trump's claim that he told the President
directly he was not under investigation and is also set to describe
interactions with Trump that made him uneasy.
Sen. Mark Warner, the top Democrat on the Senate intelligence
committee, was skeptical about the timing of Wray's nomination.
"I think it is more than a little bit curious that the President chose
this morning as the time to announce his new FBI head," Warner said on
CNN's "New Day." "There will be a time and place to review him. But it
seems to me that this is an effort to try to take people's attention
off what is going to be the main event, at least for the next two
days: the leaders of our intelligence community and the FBI director."
Nearly two hours after Trump tweeted "details to follow" about Wray,
the Justice Department circulated a one-page primer on Wray's prior
government service, work in private practice and education to
Republican surrogates, according to a source with knowledge of the
document.
Wray's nomination will be considered by the Senate judiciary
committee. The panel's Republican chairman, Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley,
learned about the nomination from Trump's tweet, according to a senior
staff member for Grassley.
California Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the top Democrat on the judiciary
committee, said she learned about the nomination from Trump's tweet.
She said Wray "may be fine" but added that she still needs to vet him.
Praised ex-acting AG Yates
Wray's career includes relationships with several prominent figures
who have factored in Trump's young presidency. He was among the top
Justice Department officials who planned to resign en masse with Comey
and then-FBI Director Robert Mueller after top White House officials
attempted in 2004 to reinstate a warrantless domestic surveillance
program that the Justice Department had ruled illegal.
Mueller is currently the special counsel overseeing the probe into
alleged ties between Trump's campaign and Russia.
Wray also signed a 2015 letter to the Senate judiciary committee from
a number of partners from his law firm endorsing Sally Yates'
nomination to become deputy attorney general. In the letter, the
partners praise Yates for her "extraordinary legal skill and
judgment."
Shortly after he became president, Trump fired Yates, then the acting
attorney general, over her refusal to enforce his travel ban. At the
time, the White House said Yates had "betrayed" the Justice
Department.
Served during Bush administration
Wray was unanimously confirmed by the Senate in 2003 to lead the
Justice Department's criminal division, where he oversaw several
high-profile investigations, from the Enron scandal to the Justice
Department's response to terrorism in the wake of 9/11.
He first joined the Justice Department as associate deputy attorney
general after four years as assistant US attorney for the Northern
District of Georgia, which covers the city of Atlanta.
Wray has given $53,350 to Republican candidates, committees and his
law firm's PAC since 2007, including to John McCain in 2008, Mitt
Romney in 2012, and the National Republican Senatorial Committee in
2016, FEC records show. There are no records of any contributions to
Trump.
m
He's also has represented a slew of Fortune 100 companies that have
been the subject of state and federal investigations.

Wray is a Yale Law school graduate, where he served as executive
editor of the Yale Law Journal.

Tumultuous weeks in wake of Comey firing

Wray was interviewed by Sessions and his deputy, Rod Rosenstein, two
weeks ago, a Justice Department official told CNN.

The announcement caps off several tumultuous weeks for the White House
since Trump suddenly fired Comey, prompting allegations that Trump was
trying to impede the FBI's investigation into ties between his
campaign associates and Russia and eventually leading Rosenstein to
appoint Mueller as special counsel to oversee that investigation.

Rosenstein was only empowered to make that decision because Sessions
in March recused himself from involvement in that investigation due to
his role as a top Trump campaign adviser and prominent surrogate.

Wray's nomination ends a nearly month-long search to replace Comey. At
separate points, former Connecticut Sen. Joseph Lieberman and Texas
Republican Sen. John Cornyn appeared to be front-runners for the job,
but both eventually withdrew from consideration.
Several additional candidates -- including former Assistant Attorney
General Alice Fisher, Associate Judge Michael Garcia of the New York
Court of Appeals, career FBI official Richard McFeely and South
Carolina Republican Rep. Trey Gowdy -- also removed themselves as
possible successors.

In a statement, Fisher, who succeeded Wray at the DOJ's criminal
division, called him a "wonderful choice" to head the bureau, saying
he already has strong relationships there and "cares deeply about the
institution."

"He's an excellent lawyer who will provide even-keeled leadership," she added.
CNN's Evan Perez, Manu Raju, Curt Devine, David Wright and Dylan
Stafford contributed to this report.




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