
PATRICK J. FITZGERALD began serving as the United States Attorney for the
Northern District of Illinois on September 1, 2001. He was initially appointed on
an interim basis by Attorney General John Ashcroft, succeeding former U.S.
Attorney Scott R. Lassar. Subsequently, he was nominated by President George W.
Bush. The United States Senate confirmed his nomination by unanimous consent on
October 23, 2001, and President Bush signed his commission on October 29, 2001.
Prior to his appointment, Mr. Fitzgerald served as an Assistant U.S. Attorney
in the United States Attorney's office for the Southern District of New York
for thirteen years. He has served as Chief of the Organized Crime-Terrorism Unit
since December 1995, in addition to holding other supervisory positions during
his tenure in that office.
As U.S. Attorney, Mr. Fitzgerald is the district's top federal law
enforcement official. He manages a staff of 250, including 137 Assistant
U.S. Attorneys who handle civil litigation, criminal investigations and
prosecutions involving public corruption, narcotics trafficking, violent crime,
and white-collar fraud.
In New York, Mr. Fitzgerald participated in the prosecution of
United States v.
Usama Bin Laden, et al., in which 23 defendants were charged with various
offenses, including conspiracy to murder United States nationals overseas and
the August 1998 bombings of the Untied States embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, and
Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. Seven defendants are in custody in the United States;
three defendants are in custody in the United Kingdom; and thirteen defendants
are fugitives. Four defendants went on trial in January 2001 in New York, and a
jury returned guilty verdicts against all four on May 29, 0201. All four were
sentenced to life in prison on October 18, 2001.
Mr. Fitzgerald also participated in the trial of
United States v.
Omar Adbel
Rahman, et al., a nine-month trial in 1995 of twelve defendants who
participated in a seditious conspiracy that involved the February 1993 bombing
of the World Trade Center and a spring 1993 plot to bomb the United Nations,
the FBI Building in New York, and the Holland and Lincoln Tunnels, as well as a
conspiracy to assassinate President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt. He also supervised
the case of
United States v.
Ramzi Yousef, et al., the 1996
prosecution of three defendants who participated in a conspiracy in the Philippines in late 1994 and
early 1995 to detonate bombs simultaneously on twelve American airliners. In
1993, Mr. Fitzgerald participated in the six-month trial of
United States v.
John Gambino, et al., the prosecution of a Gambino crime family capo and his
crew for narcotics trafficking, murder, racketeering, jury tampering, and other
charges.
Among Mr. Fitzgerald's awards and honors are the Attorney General's Award for
Exceptional Service in 1996 and the Stimson Medal from the Association of the
Bar of the City of New York in 1997. In New York, Mr. Fitzgerald's other
supervisory posts were National Security Coordinator from February 1996 to
January 1999 and Chief of the Narcotics Unit from January to June 1994.
Mr. Fitzgerald, 41, is a native of Brooklyn, NY. He joined the U.S. Attorney's
Office in Manhattan in 1998 after three years as a litigation associate at the
New York law firm, Christy & Viener. He graduated from Amherst College, Phi
Beta Kappa, with a bachelor's degree in economics and mathematics in 1982, and
from Harvard Law School in 1985.
Last updated: October 4, 2002
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