Candidates emerge to replace Mueller at FBI

By Jerry Markon, Tuesday, March 15, 7:08 AM

http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/candidates-emerge-to-replace-mueller-at-fbi/2011/03/14/ABgHeaW_print.html

The jockeying over who will replace FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III has 
begun, with FBI agents urging that President Obama select the former head of 
the bureau’s Washington field office for the critical position.

Mueller, 66, is facing a mandatory 10-year retirement in September after a 
tumultuous tenure in which he oversaw the crackdown on terrorism after Sept. 
11, 2001, and the bureau’s ongoing transformation into an intelligence agency 
focused on preventing attacks.

In a letter sent Monday to Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr., the FBI Agents 
Association recommended Michael A. Mason, a longtime FBI agent and supervisor 
who is now security chief for Verizon Communications. Mason, a former assistant 
director in charge of the Washington Field Office, would be the FBI’s first 
African American director.

Law enforcement sources said other possible candidates include Patrick J. 
Fitzgerald, the U.S. attorney in Chicago who investigated the leak of the 
identity of former CIA officer Valerie Plame Wilson; New York Police 
Commissioner Raymond Kelly and John S. Pistole, administrator for the 
Transportation Security Administration and Mueller’s former deputy. All three 
declined to comment Monday, as did Mason.

The sources, who declined to be identified because the search is not public, 
said that contenders also include James B. Comey, who was deputy attorney 
general in the George W. Bush administration, and Frances Fragos Townsend, a 
top Bush terror adviser who was a confidante of then-Attorney General Janet 
Reno in the Clinton administration. Townsend declined to comment; Comey did not 
return e-mails seeking comment.

White House officials declined to comment, but law enforcement sources said the 
search for Mueller’s successor is being led by Vice President Biden, who 
chaired the Judiciary Committee in the Senate. Among those advising Biden are 
Holder and Louis J. Freeh, who was FBI director in the Clinton administration, 
the sources said. President Obama will make the decision.

It is unclear if any front-runner has emerged or precisely what qualities the 
administration is seeking in a nominee, though sources said counterterrorism 
experience is considered especially important.

Experts said that Mueller, a low-profile former Marine and federal prosecutor 
with a no-nonsense style, will be difficult to replace. Mueller started a week 
before Sept. 11, and his agency has successfully led the government’s efforts 
to prevent another terror attack on U.S. soil. It has also been criticized by 
some civil liberties advocates and Muslim leaders for tough anti-terrorism 
tactics.

“Mueller was there on the ground when we went through all this, when we had the 
Sept. 11 attacks, when we had the response and when he had to change the 
agency,’’ said Stephen A. Saltzburg, a law professor at George Washington 
University and former Justice Department official.

The agents association, which represents more than 12,000 active and retired 
FBI agents, is arguing that Mason fits the profile. A native of Obama’s home 
town of Chicago, Mason spent nearly 23 years with the FBI, rising to become 
executive assistant director for the Criminal Investigative Division before 
leaving in 2007.

His nomination would be a symbol of how far the agency has come from the days 
of longtime director J. Edgar Hoover, when African American agents faced 
difficulties and Martin Luther King Jr. was hounded by government 
investigations.

In an interview with The Washington Post in 2006, Mason said he was struck as a 
child by the heroism and intelligence of the bureau’s fabled G-men and that by 
seventh grade he was faithfully watching the weekly television show “The F.B.I.”

Konrad Motyka, president of the FBI agents association, said there was a 
“groundswell” of support for Mason’s candidacy among agents. “They said that 
throughout his entire career, he put agents first, had tremendous integrity and 
was very frank with everyone,’’ Motyka said.

Mason would be a somewhat unusual pick, however, in that he was an FBI lifer 
before moving to the private sector. FBI directors in recent decades have 
tended to come from outside the agency. Of the four directors since 1978, only 
Freeh worked as an FBI agent, and that was for just six years.

A possible outsider choice is Kelly, who has the backing of Sen. Charles E. 
Schumer (D-N.Y.). Schumer said at a news conference Monday that he would press 
Kelly’s nomination with the administration.

“He understands terrorism, which obviously is at the forefront of the FBI’s 
mission these days,’’ Schumer said. “He has great community relations, he’s 
been known for outreach, and how to deal with all the disparate communities 
here in New York. ... I think there could be nobody better than Commissioner 
Kelly.’’


[email protected]

Staff reporters Anne E. Kornblut and Spencer S. Hsu contributed to this story.
_______________________________________________
Infowarrior mailing list
[email protected]
https://attrition.org/mailman/listinfo/infowarrior

Reply via email to