Rachel Brand, associate attorney general
in the Department of Justice, is stepping down from her position, Fox
News confirmed on Friday. Brand, the No. 3 official in the DOJ, will be
leaving following a nine-month tenure in the role.
A friend of Brand’s says she was “not looking to leave,” but was
approached with a “dream job.” Brand will now head to work for Walmart
as executive vice president, global governance and corporate secretary.
DOJ officials say Principal Deputy Associate AG Jesse Panuccio will step
in as the acting Associate Attorney General.
News of Brand’s departure was first reported by The New York Times.
In the line of succession, Brand had been behind Deputy Attorney General
Rod Rosenstein. Rosenstein is overseeing Special Counsel Robert
Mueller’s probe into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential
election. She was in line to oversee the investigation if Rosenstein
stepped down.
Should Rosenstein step down now, Solicitor General Noel Francisco would
take over the probe, not Panuccio. (Attorney General Jeff Sessions
recused himself from the Russia inquiry last year.)
“The men and women of the Department of Justice impress me every day,”
Brand said in a statement on Friday. “I am proud of what we have been
able to accomplish over my time here. I want to thank Attorney General
Sessions for his leadership over this Department. I’ve seen firsthand
his commitment to the rule of law and to keeping the American people
safe.”
Brand had been overseeing the DOJ's antitrust, civil and civil rights
divisons. She also assisted in an extension of the National Security
Agency's warrantless surveillance program.
Brand, Sessions said in the same statement, “played a critical role in
helping us accomplish our goals as a Department—taking on human
trafficking, protecting free speech on campus, and fighting sexual
harassment in public housing.
"And when I asked her to take the lead in the Department’s efforts on
Section 702 re-authorization, she made this her top priority and
combined her expertise and gravitas to help pass legislation keeping
this crucial national security tool. Rachel has shown real leadership
over many important divisions at the Department. I know the entire
Department of Justice will miss her, but we join together in
congratulating her on this new opportunity in the private sector. She
will always remain a part of the Department of Justice family.”
Currie Gunn, Brand’s assistant, has also left the department, according
to The Times.
Jake Gibson is a producer working at the Fox News Washington bureau who
covers politics, law enforcement and intelligence issues. |
|