FBI Director Chris Wray Picks Paul Murphy as Chief of Staff

FBI director Christopher Wray has selected another former King & Spalding colleague to serve as his chief of staff

NAFUSA member Paul B. Murphy, a King & Spalding partner in Atlanta and former associate deputy attorney general in Washington, D.C., has been tapped to replace Zack Harmon, spokeswomen at the FBI and the law firm confirmed. Harmon, former King & Spalding partner himself, has served as Wray’s chief of staff since January 2018.

Murphy is slated to assume the chief of staff’s duties June 24. Wray said Murphy brings “a wealth of experience” to the FBI.

Murphy is a partner in King & Spalding’s special matters and government investigations practice. Wray, also a former King & Spalding partner, chaired that practice until he was appointed by President Donald Trump to replace former FBI director James Comey. Wray also served as an assistant U.S. attorney in Atlanta early in his legal career.

Murphy said he is excited to work with Wray again, adding he has “great affection” for the Justice Department and “tremendous respect for the mission and work of the FBI.”

“While it was a difficult decision to leave King & Spalding and the many friends with whom I’ve worked for the past 15 years, the special matters team has a deep bench of amazingly talented people, and I know that the group will continue to thrive and accomplish great things.”

Murphy—the son of U.S. District Senior Judge Harold Murphy of the Northern District of Georgia—joined King & Spalding in 1988 after earning a law degree at the University of Georgia. Like Harmon and other veterans of King & Spalding’s special matters and government investigations practice, Murphy has extensive experience working for the U.S. Department of Justice. The practice was founded and initially chaired by former U.S. Attorney General Griffin Bell, who served under President Jimmy Carter. The practice focuses on white-collar criminal defense; civil and regulatory investigations; and internal corporate and congressional investigations.

In 1997, Murphy left King & Spalding for a four-year stint as an assistant U.S. attorney in Georgia’s Southern District. Murphy was then tapped to be chief of staff for then-U.S. Deputy Attorney General Larry Thompson, another former King & Spalding government investigations practice veteran. Murphy also served as an associate deputy attorney general overseeing the DOJ’s criminal and civil health care fraud enforcement program, and was the principal policy liaison to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

In January 2004, U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft picked Murphy to serve as the United States Attorney for the Southern District of Georgia.