Monaco, approved by a vote of 98-2, will oversee a vast
portfolio encompassing criminal and national security
investigations, as well as all U.S. Attorney's Offices across 94
districts.
The deputy attorney general position is also instrumental in
developing criminal justice policies, from sentencing to
clemency.
One of the most pressing tasks Monaco will face on being sworn
in will be helping to supervise the sprawling probe into the
Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol by a mob of supporters of
then-President Donald Trump.
More than 410 defendants are facing a range of charges for their
role in the riot, from minor trespassing to serious offenses
such as assaulting police, obstructing Congress and conspiring
to storm the Capitol.
Another major issue that Monaco will be contending with is the
fallout from an alleged Russian-led hacking campaign that
targeted software made by SolarWinds Corp, compromising
government offices including the U.S. Treasury, Justice and
Commerce departments.
Most recently, Monaco, 53, worked with the law firm O’Melveny &
Myers.
Before that, she served a variety of roles in the Justice
Department and White House.
She was a prosecutor who served on the government’s multi-agency
task force that focused on wrongdoing by Enron Corp after the
energy company's 2001 collapse.
Monaco later worked at the FBI advising its former director
Robert Mueller and served as assistant attorney general in the
National Security Division from 2011 to 2013 under President
Barack Obama.
She also worked as Obama’s homeland security and
counterterrorism adviser.
"She is one of the nation's foremost national security experts,"
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Dick Durbin said on the
Senate floor, adding her experience "has prepared her to oversee
DOJ's operations at this critical moment in history."
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch; Additional reporting by Richard
Cowan; Editing by Karishma Singh and Peter Cooney)
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