Gregory B. Craig | |
|---|---|
| White House Counsel | |
| In office January 20, 2009 – January 3, 2010 | |
| President | Barack Obama |
| Preceded by | Fred Fielding |
| Succeeded by | Bob Bauer |
| 19thDirector of Policy Planning | |
| In office July 10, 1997 – September 16, 1998 | |
| President | Bill Clinton |
| Preceded by | Jim Steinberg |
| Succeeded by | Morton Halperin |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Gregory Bestor Craig (1945-03-04)March 4, 1945 (age 80) Norfolk, Virginia, U.S. |
| Political party | Democratic |
| Education | Harvard University (BA) Emmanuel College, Cambridge (MPhil) Yale University (JD) |
Gregory Bestor Craig (born March 4, 1945) is an American lawyer and formerWhite House Counsel under PresidentBarack Obama, from 2009 to 2010. A former attorney at the Washington, D.C.law firm ofWilliams & Connolly, Craig has represented numerous high-profile clients. Prior to becoming White House Counsel, he served as assistant to the President and special counsel in theWhite House of PresidentBill Clinton, where he directed the teamdefending Clinton against impeachment. Craig also served as a senior advisor to SenatorEdward Kennedy and toSecretary of StateMadeleine Albright.
After leaving theObama administration, Craig returned to private practice as a partner at the law firmSkadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom. In 2019, Craig was indicted on charges of lying to federal prosecutors about the work he did at Skadden on behalf of thegovernment of Ukraine underViktor F. Yanukovych, work referred to Craig byPaul Manafort, then a Yanukovych consultant. Craig was acquitted in a jury trial.[1]
Craig was born inNorfolk, Virginia, on March 4, 1945.[2] Craig's father, William Gregory Craig (1914–2005), was aNavy officer who served inWorld War II and after the war served as chancellor of theVermont State Colleges system (1973–1976), chancellor of theCalifornia Community College system (1977–1980), and president of theMonterey Institute (1980–1988).[3] The elder Craig unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination forGovernor of Vermont.[3] The younger considersVermont his home state;[2] he grew up as one of four boys inMiddlebury, Vermont.[4] He spent some of his early years inPalo Alto, California.[5]
Craig attendedPhillips Exeter Academy inNew Hampshire.[5][6] He then attendedHarvard University, graduating with anA.B. in 1967.[5][6][7] At Harvard, Craig sang with theKrokodiloes, Harvard's oldest all-malea cappella group.[6][8] Craig graduatedPhi Beta Kappa with a concentration in history.[6] His senior thesis was onUpton Sinclair's campaigns during theGreat Depression.[6] Craig was elected chairman of theHarvard Undergraduate Council during his senior year.[6] During his time at Harvard, Craig became familiar with prominent faculty members, includingHenry Kissinger.[6] During this period, Craigregistered black voters in Mississippi, tutored children inHarlem, and "became Harvard's most widely quoted student leader inopposition to the Vietnam War."[9]
Craig considered claimingconscientious objector status to avoid theVietnam-era draft, but he eventually submitted himself to theExeter, New Hampshire, draft board, saying that "I thought it was the only honorable thing to do."[9] Craig received amedical deferment for a shoulder injury.[5][9] Craig earned aLionel de Jersey Harvard Fellowship to study atCambridge University in England,[6] where he received amaster's degree in historical studies in 1968.[5][7]
After returning to United States, Craig attendedYale Law School, where he was a member of the same class asBill Clinton,Hillary Rodham, andDavid E. Kendall.[5] In the fall of 1971, Craig sublet his apartment inNew Haven to Rodham and Clinton for $75 a month.[4] Craig received hisJ.D. degree from Yale Law School in 1972.[7][10] After graduating, Craig, along with Kendall, took a job at the law firm ofWilliams & Connolly.[5][10]
Craig worked mostly at Williams & Connolly from 1972 to 2009, with his tenure there interrupted by periods working as apublic defender, on the staff of SenatorEdward M. Kennedy, at theState Department, and at theClinton White House.[5]
Three years after Craig began at Williams & Connolly, he left to follow his wife toConnecticut, where she obtained amaster's degree in fine arts.[5] While in Connecticut, Craig worked as a public defender.[5]
Craig later returned to Williams & Connolly, where he was protege ofJoe Califano andEdward Bennett Williams.[9] One of Craig's first big criminal cases at Williams & Connolly was that of multimillionaire D.C. developerDominic F. Antonelli Jr., the chairman of Parking Management Inc. (PMI), who was charged withbribery andconspiracy in connection with an attempt to secure a D.C. government lease from D.C. official Joseph P. Yeldell, his codefendant. Craig defended Antonelli alongside his Williams & Connolly colleagues Kendall and Williams.[5][11][12] Antonelli and Yeldell were convicted by a jury in Washington, but that conviction was vacated on grounds ofjury bias, and at a retrial inPhiladelphia the two men were acquitted.[12][13] Craig is an admirer of Edward Bennett Williams, saying that he was "the great lawyer of our generation."[14]
In 1981, Craig was a member of the team that representedJohn W. Hinckley Jr., whoattempted to assassinateRonald Reagan; Hinckley was foundnot guilty by reason of insanity.[2][7] Craig worked in the office of SenatorEdward M. Kennedy as his chief defense, national security, and foreign policy aide from 1984 to 1988.[2][7] Craig also defended Kennedy's nephewWilliam Kennedy Smith on charges of assault; William Kennedy Smith had earlier been acquitted on rape charges in 1991.[2]
Craig also served as chairman of the International Human Rights Law Group (laterGlobal Rights).[15]
In 1996, Craig was offered the post of White House Counsel by Bill Clinton, but Craig declined.[16] Secretary of StateMadeleine K. Albright appointed Craig to the post ofDirector of Policy Planning at theState Department in 1997.[2][7] Craig served in that post from June 1997 to 1998.[7][15] As policy planning director, Craig served as a senior advisor to Albright[15] and led the State Department's internalthink tank.[14] In October 1997, Albright gave Craig the additional post of Special Coordinator for Tibetan Affairs, in order "to focus attention onChina's suppression of Tibet's cultural and religious traditions."[15]
Craig worked in the White House during the Clinton administration from 1998 to 1999, holding the title ofAssistant to the President and special counsel.[7] Craig's old friend and law partner Kendall was Clinton's personal attorney.[9] Craig was brought on specifically to coordinate the White House's defense of Clinton duringimpeachment proceedings against him. Termed the "quarterback" by Clinton, Craig worked from theWest Wing and oversaw legal, political, congressional, andpublic relations aspects of the defense, reporting regularly to Clinton and consulting withJohn Podesta, theWhite House chief of staff.[9] However, Craig claimed in an interview withPBS Frontline in July 2000 that Podesta was the one who recruited him and that Podesta told him that the White House needed a "coordinator quarterback."[17] He also stated that he mainly coordinated with Podesta and that "I could name to John ten other lawyers in America that could do the job as well, if not better."[17] Craig also stated that he wanted to remain in the State Department and that when Podesta first asked him to be the lawyer, he told him "Forgive me, John, if I'm not enthusiastic about the idea."[17]
Craig's style was collegial in nature and he earned the respect of other White House staffers, although there was tension with then-White House CounselCharles Ruff; according toThe Washington Post, "each man behaved as if he were the one in charge" and the two had different professional styles.[9] Ruff, Kendall, and Craig were three members of a five-member team of lawyers defending the president; the other two wereCheryl D. Mills andDale Bumpers.[18]
Craig then returned to private practice at Williams & Connolly as a partner.[19] During theElián González affair in 2000, Craig represented Juan Miguel Gonzáles, the Cuban father of six-year-oldElián González, in an internationalchild custody dispute involving "the volatile field ofCuban-American relations" which ended with the boy's return to Cuba.[2][7][20]
Other high-profile clients represented by Craig while at Williams & Connolly includeRichard Helms, the ex-director of Central Intelligence who was convicted of lying to Congress over the CIA's role in removingSalvador Allende;[14]UN Secretary-GeneralKofi Annan;[14][21]Soviet dissidentAleksandr Solzhenitsyn;[21] and Panamanian dictatorManuel Noriega.[14] He reported earning a salary of $1.7 million from the firm in 2008.[19]
Craig met Barack andMichelle Obama for the first time in 2003, at the home ofVernon Jordan, a close friend of the Clintons, and the then-Illinois state senator impressed Craig.[4][22] Despite close ties to the Clintons, Craig urged Obama to run for president, and became an informal foreign policy adviser to him.[23] In March 2007, Craig publicly declared his support for Obama in the2008 Democratic presidential primary; because of his close ties to the Clintons, this attracted widespread attention.[4][24]
In summer 2008, during the presidential campaign, Obama decided to support legislation (specifically, an amendment to theForeign Intelligence Surveillance Act) for granting legal immunity to telecommunications companies that cooperated with theBush administration's warrantless NSA wiretapping program.[25] This angered many Democrats, because it was a reversal of Obama's earlier vow during the primary campaign to oppose such legislation and tofilibuster against it.[25] In his role as an advisor to the Obama campaign, Craig defended Obama's reversal, and said that Obama "concluded that with FISA expiring, that it was better to get a compromise than letting the law expire."[25] This was incorrect, as FISA itself has no expiration date. JournalistGlenn Greenwald criticized Craig for the "flat-out false" statement. However, in an interview with Greenwald, Craig said that, in explaining to Risen why Obama intended to compromise, he meant to say that certain existing warrants, which had issued under recently expired provisions of FISA, would soon expire themselves unless compromise could be reached on a pending broad amendment of FISA. Said Craig, Obama concluded it was better to compromise.[26]
During the campaign, Craig "seemed on a mission to destroy Hillary's political future." He emerged as "an outspoken critic of Hillary's foreign policy experience and ... a leading contender to be secretary of state after Obama got the nomination."[16]
In late summer and fall 2008, Craig, a skilled trial lawyer, assumed the role ofJohn McCain in Obama's preparations for thepresidential debates.[23] The campaign expected "that McCain would condescend to Obama as a wet-behind-the-ears rookie" and Craig played his role as such.[23] Craig-as-McCain "glowered" at Obama in debate prep, saying, "Do not lecture me about the war. Do not tell me how to deploy men in combat. I was flying a jet overVietnam when you were in grade school."[23] Obama was tutored to remain unflinching and counterattack by listing McCain's past misjudgments.[23] In the2004 presidential election, Craig played a similar role in preparingJohn Kerry for the debates; Craig playedGeorge W. Bush in practice sessions.[27]

In its November 2008 issue, shortly before the2008 presidential election, theABA Journal speculated that Craig might be named Secretary of State in an Obama administration.[28] Craig also reportedly hoped for that position or another foreign policy post in the Obama administration, which did not materialize.[29] Obama ultimately appointed Craig to serve as his first White House Counsel.[29] Craig served in that post from January 2009 to January 2010.[7]
In his first year in the Obama administration, Craig handled "one of the most difficult portfolios in theWest Wing."[30] Craig drafted theexecutive order banning the use oftorture and another executive order which ordered the closure within a year of theGuantanamo Bay prison camp (which never materialized).[30] Over the objections of theCentral Intelligence Agency, Craig also recommended the release of the "Torture Memos" of theOffice of Legal Counsel of theU.S. Department of Justice.[4][30] In an interview in 2011 (after leaving his post as White House counsel), Craig said of the release of the memos: "I think the President made the right decision. It was in the public interest, and it did no damage tonational security."[4] Craig added that the memos were the subject of aFreedom of Information Act suit and that he believed that the likelihood of a judge ordering those memos released was high in any case.[4]
Craig also "was at the center of the White House decision to reverse itself and withhold photographs of abuse of detainees."[30]
As White House counsel, Craig also oversaw the successfulconfirmation ofSonia Sotomayor to theSupreme Court of the United States.[29] Craig oversaw thevetting of severalprospective nominees and, once Sotomayor was selected, helped prepare her for Senate confirmation hearings.[4][31][32]
Since the summer of 2009, "word had been leaking that Greg Craig's days [as White House Counsel] were numbered and that Obama campaign legal counselBob Bauer would be moving in to take Craig's spot."[33] Craig did not know who was responsible for the sustained leaks, although "he suspected they were driven by someone in the White House who was frustrated with the slow progress on shuttering" the Guantanamo Bay prison camp.[33]Nina Totenberg ofNPR reported that "There doesn't seem to be much doubt that these leaks came at least indirectly fromRahm Emanuel," theWhite House chief of staff.[33]Jonathan Alter reported that Craig and Emanuel had a bad relationship, with Emanuel believing that Craig was attempting "to build up his own mini-National Security Council instead of focusing on bread-and-butter legal issues."[34] Alter also reported that Emanuel became enraged when Craig personally traveled with fourChinese Muslim Uighurs released from Guantanamo to Bermuda.[34]
By late October 2009,The New York Times reported that Craig had "for months now ... endured speculation in print and around the White House about whether he is on the way out."[35] Craig stated then that he had no plans to leave and that the president had faith in him, but theTimes reported that "colleagues and Democrats close to the White House said they expected him to move on around the end of the year, and they have been talking about possible replacements."[35] By that time, Craig's authority had diminished: Emanuel had assignedPete Rouse to handle Guantánamo issues, and, once after Craig started the search that led to the nomination of Sonia Sotomayor, assignedRonald A. Klain andCynthia Hogan to handle the confirmation.[30][35]

Jonathan Alter reported that Obama "tried to avoid a high-profile ouster" of Craig by offering him an appointment to afederal judgeship, which Craig declined.[34] Craig was subsequently forced out, learning of his impending ouster while reading the morning paper.[34]
On November 13, 2009, the White House announced that Craig would leave his post at the end of the year, and would be replaced byRobert Bauer.[30][36][37]
Craig's ouster following the "whisper campaign" against him angered his friends and supporters inside and outside the White House, who viewed him as a scapegoat.[30][34][35][37] Obama's handling of Craig's resignation was also criticized in the media.Steve Clemons called it "the assassination of Greg Craig" and said that "the White House counsel was done in by a scurrilous leaks campaign."[33]Maureen Dowd wrote that "the way the Craig matter was handled sent a chill through some Obama supporters, reminding them of the icy manner in which the Clintons cut looseKimba Wood andLani Guinier."[38]Elizabeth Drew called it "the shabbiest episode of [Obama's] presidency."[38]
Craig's resignation took effect on January 3, 2010.[37] He became the highest-ranking official to leave the Obama administration up until that point.[30]
Craig stated that he had planned to return to Williams & Connolly from the White House until he got a call from an old friend,Clifford Sloan, and a new friend,Joseph H. Flom, who asked him to join their law firm,Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, to establish a crisis-management team and a new practice group focusing on global issues and litigation strategies.[4] On January 27, 2010, Skadden announced that Craig had joined the firm's Washington, D.C. office as a Global Policy and Litigation Strategy Practice Group partner.[39]
In April 2010, it was reported that Craig, as a Skadden partner, was representing theinvestment banking firmGoldman Sachs; the firm engaged Craig to advise it on litigation strategy in aSecurities and Exchange Commission civil suit.[40] When asked about Craig's new role,Deputy White House Press SecretaryBill Burton said that the administration did not have any advance knowledge of Craig's new role and also said, "I assume that people who leave the administration know [the Obama administration's rules barring former White House officials from lobbying fortwo years after leaving office] and are following those rules."[40] Craig said "I am a lawyer, not a lobbyist. Goldman Sachs has hired me as a lawyer—to provide legal advice and to assist in its legal representation—and that is what I am doing."[40] Legal representation was not covered by the Obama administration's ban.[40]
In 2011, Craig initially represented former SenatorJohn Edwards, a former presidential and vice presidential candidate, in the federal prosecution of Edwards on charges of illegally using campaign funds to cover up his affair withRielle Hunter.[41][42] Edwards was subsequentlyacquitted.[42]
In 2012, Craig co-chaired (with former Republican congressmanVin Weber) a bipartisan task force formed by theWashington Institute for Near East Policy which looked intoAmerican policy toward Egypt, then led byPresidentMohamed Morsi.[43] The task force recommended a middle ground on continuing U.S. economic andmilitary aid to Egypt; the group's report, released in November 2012, called for "an approach whereby the United States continues to provide substantial economic and military aid while linking both direct support and backing for international financial support to Egyptian cooperation on key U.S. interests."[43]
Craig led a team of lawyers from Skadden who were commissioned by thegovernment of Ukraine underPresidentViktor Yanukovich to look into errors inthe trial of formerUkrainian prime ministerYulia Tymoshenko on abuse-of-power charges.[44] The report, released in December 2012, found that Tymoshenko wasdenied legal counsel at "critical stages" of the trial and that her lawyers were wrongly barred from calling witnesses in her defense.[44] The report concluded that Tymoshenko'sright to a fair trial "appears to have been compromised to a degree that is troubling under Western standards ofdue process and therule of law."[44] However, the report also concluded that Tymoshenko's conviction was supported by the evidence presented at trial and rejected the claim that the prosecution of Tymoshenko was politically motivated by Yanukovich to obstruct the Ukrainian opposition.[44] Tymoshenko's attorneys rejected that finding, saying that the report was not independent because it was commissioned by the Ukrainian government, which paid Skadden an undisclosed sum of money,[44] and human rights organizations regarded the report as a "whitewash."[45]
Craig promoted the report to journalists and members of Congress without much success.[46] Some experts said that Craig should have registered as a foreign agent, as theForeign Agents Registration Act (FARA) requires those to lobby on behalf of foreign governments to register;[46] however, Craig's attorneys stated that Craig "never disseminated Skadden's report on the Tymoshenko trial to U.S. government officials, and he did not discuss Skadden's findings with officials in the executive branch or the Congress or their staffs," and "was not required to register under FARA."[47] In January 2019, Craig's former law firm, Skadden, paid $4.6 million to the U.S. government indisgorgement as part of a civil settlement.[48][49][50]
In April 2018, Craig resigned from Skadden following the indictment ofAlex van der Zwaan, a lawyer at the firm'sLondon office. Craig was the lead attorney supervising the firm's work for former Ukrainian presidentViktor Yanukovych, in which van der Zwaan participated. Van der Zwaan was later charged as a result of theMueller investigation, and he pleaded guilty tomaking false statements.[45][51] Following a referral from Mueller's office, theU.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York (USAO-SDNY) inManhattan investigated Craig and others, including ex-lobbyistTony Podesta and former Republican U.S. RepresentativeVin Weber, as part of a broader investigation into the activities ofPaul Manafort.[52]
Geoffrey S. Berman, who wasU.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York from 2018 to 2020, wrote in his 2022 memoirs that, throughout his two and a half years as U.S. attorney, officials in Trump's Justice Department repeatedly attempted to interfere with the office to politically benefit Trump, and that these officials "kept demanding that I use my office to aid them politically."[53] Berman wrote that USAO-SDNY had come under a level of political pressure from Trump officials that was "unprecedented and scary," and that he rebuffed these requests.[53] In June 2020, Trump, angered by USAO-SDNY's investigations into Trump alliesMichael Cohen andRudy Giuliani, fired Berman.[53] Berman said that, following his office's investigation, USAO-SDNY concluded that Craig did not commit a FARA violation and had decided not to pursue charges against him, but that in September 2018, a Trump Justice Department official,Edward O'Callaghan, contacted Berman's office and asked him to charge Craig before the2018 midterm elections, saying that "It's time for you guys to even things out" after the indictments of Cohen andChris Collins, a Republican congressman and Trump ally.[53][54][55] O'Callaghan denied making the statements.[55]
The Justice Department ultimately passed the case to federal prosecutors in Washington, D.C.[46] In early April 2019, Craig's lawyers said that they expected him to be indicted by Mueller on charges of concealing and falsifying material facts relating to the investigation's inquiry into possible FARA violations, centering around the work he performed in 2012.[56][57] Craig was indicted on April 11, 2019,[58] on a single count ofmaking false statements.[55] The indictment came after the U.S. Attorney for D.C. rejected Berman's position that an indictment was unwarranted and inappropriate.[53] The indictment alleged that Manafort hired Craig and others at Skadden to write a report which would show favor towards Yanukovich, who was known for his close ties to the Russian government, and that Manafort paid them "millions of dollars".[59][60][61]
The indictment was criticized as weak and politicized.[54] Craig pleaded not guilty,[62] and testified in his own defense.[63] Prosecutors did not call Manafort as a witness.[63] The jury was informed by the judge not to consider possible offenses committed before October 2013 because thestatute of limitations for those actions had run out.[63] On September 4, 2019, the jury acquitted Craig after less than five hours of deliberation.[63] Berman, the former U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, wrote in his 2022 memoirs that the acquittal "was vindication, but the case should never have been brought. .... The case was too weak to be brought. It was inappropriate to be brought. And that's what the trial showed."[53] In 2022, following the publication of Berman's book, theSenate Judiciary Committee opened an investigation into allegations that the Trump administration sought to use the U.S. Attorney's office in SDNY for partisan reasons.[55]
Craig is married to Derry Noyes.[2][9] The two were married on July 27, 1974, inNew Canaan, Connecticut. Derry is the daughter ofEliot Noyes, the noted industrial designer known for his work on theIBM Selectric typewriter.[64] Derry Craig is agraphic designer.[9] The couple have five children.
FARA violations were only rarely prosecuted until Mueller took aim at Paul Manafort
The charges reportedly stem from the federal investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election led by special counsel Robert Mueller
| Political offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | Director of Policy Planning 1997–1998 | Succeeded by |
| Legal offices | ||
| Preceded by | White House Counsel 2009–2010 | Succeeded by |