Agency Name: | U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York |
Type: | Department |
Seal: | Seal of the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York.png |
Formed: | by the Judiciary Act of 1789 |
Jurisdiction: | Southern District of New York |
Headquarters: | Manhattan, New York City, New York, U.S. |
Chief1 Name: | Damian Williams |
Chief1 Position: | U.S. Attorney |
Parent Agency: | United States Department of Justice |
Map: | Jurisdiction of the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York.jpg |
The United States attorney for the Southern District of New York is the chief federal law enforcement officer in eight contiguous New York counties: the counties (coextensive boroughs of New York City) of New York (Manhattan) and Bronx, and the counties of Westchester, Putnam, Rockland, Orange, Dutchess, and Sullivan. Established by the Judiciary Act of 1789, the office represents the United States government in criminal and civil cases across the country. The SDNY handles a broad array of cases, including but not limited to those involving white collar crime, domestic terrorism, cybercrime, public corruption, organized crime, and civil rights disputes.
The Southern District has earned itself the moniker the "Sovereign District of New York".[1] [2] Its resources, culture, and accompanying FBI field office have given the SDNY a reputation for being exceptionally aggressive in its pursuit of criminals.[3] [4] Due to its jurisdiction over the New York City borough of Manhattan, the preeminent financial center of the United States of America, the office's incumbent is often nicknamed the "Sheriff of Wall Street".[5]
, the United States attorney is Damian Williams.[6]
The office is organized into two divisions handling civil and criminal matters. The Southern District of New York also has two offices: in Manhattan and White Plains. The office employs approximately 220 assistant U.S. attorneys.[7]
In 1814, the District of New York was divided into the Northern and the Southern District.[8]
Term | U.S. Attorney | Party | Appointed by | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | – | data-sort-value="Washington, George" | Jonathan Fisk | Democratic-Republican | data-sort-value="Adams, John" | James Madison | ||
2 | – | data-sort-value="Adams, John" | Robert L. Tillotson | Democratic-Republican | James Monroe | |||
3 | – | John Duer | Democratic-Republican | John Quincy Adams | ||||
4 | – | James A. Hamilton | Democratic | Andrew Jackson | ||||
5 | – | William M. Price | Democratic | |||||
6 | – | Benjamin F. Butler | Democratic | Martin Van Buren | ||||
7 | – | Ogden Hoffman | Whig | William Henry Harrison | ||||
8 | – | Benjamin F. Butler | Democratic | James Polk | ||||
9 | – | Charles McVean | Democratic | |||||
10 | – | Lorenzo B. Shepard | Democratic | |||||
11 | – | Jonathan Prescott Hall | Whig | Zachary Taylor | ||||
12 | – | Charles O'Conor | Democratic | Franklin Pierce | ||||
13 | – | John McKeon | Democratic | |||||
14 | – | Theodore Sedgwick | Democratic | James Buchanan | ||||
15 | – | James I. Roosevelt | Democratic | |||||
16 | – | Edward Delafield Smith | Republican | Abraham Lincoln | ||||
17 | – | Daniel S. Dickinson | Democratic | |||||
18 | – | Samuel G. Courtney | Democratic | Andrew Johnson | ||||
19 | – | Edwards Pierrepont | Republican | Ulysses S. Grant | ||||
20 | – | Noah Davis | Republican | |||||
21 | – | George Bliss Jr. | Republican | |||||
22 | – | Stewart L. Woodford | Republican | |||||
23 | – | Elihu Root | Republican | Chester A. Arthur | ||||
24 | – | William Dorsheimer | Democratic | Grover Cleveland | ||||
25 | – | Stephen A. Walker | Democratic | |||||
26 | – | Edward Mitchell | Republican | Benjamin Harrison | ||||
– | Henry C. Platt | Democratic | Grover Cleveland | |||||
27 | – | Wallace Macfarlane | Democratic | |||||
28 | – | Henry Lawrence Burnett | Republican | William McKinley | ||||
29 | – | Henry L. Stimson | Republican | Theodore Roosevelt | ||||
30 | – | Henry A. Wise | Republican | William Howard Taft | ||||
31 | – | Hudson Snowden Marshall | Democratic | Woodrow Wilson | ||||
32 | – | Francis Gordon Caffey | Democratic | |||||
33 | – | William Hayward | Republican | Warren Harding | ||||
34 | – | Emory Buckner | Republican | Calvin Coolidge | ||||
35 | – | Charles H. Tuttle | Republican | |||||
– | Robert E. Manley | Republican | Herbert Hoover | |||||
36 | – | George Z. Medalie | Republican | |||||
– | Thomas E. Dewey | Republican | Franklin D. Roosevelt | |||||
37 | – | Martin Thomas Conboy Jr. | Democratic | |||||
– | Francis W. H. Adams | Democratic | ||||||
38 | – | Lamar Hardy | Democratic | |||||
– | Gregory Francis Noonan | Democratic | ||||||
39 | – | John T. Cahill | Democratic | |||||
40 | – | Mathias F. Correa | Democratic | |||||
– | Howard F. Corcoran | Democratic | ||||||
41 | – | James B. M. McNally | Democratic | |||||
42 | – | John F. X. McGohey | Democratic | |||||
43 | – | Irving Saypol | Democratic | Harry S. Truman | ||||
44 | – | Myles J. Lane | Democratic | |||||
45 | – | J. Edward Lumbard | Republican[9] | Dwight D. Eisenhower | ||||
– | Lloyd F. MacMahon | Republican | ||||||
46 | – | Paul W. Williams | Republican | |||||
– | Arthur H. Christy | Republican | ||||||
47 | – | Samuel Hazard Gillespie Jr. | Republican | |||||
– | Morton S. Robson | Republican | John F. Kennedy | |||||
48 | – | Robert Morgenthau | Democratic | |||||
49 | – | Whitney North Seymour Jr. | Republican | Richard Nixon | ||||
50 | – | Paul J. Curran | Republican | |||||
– | Thomas J. Cahill | Republican | Gerald Ford | |||||
51 | – | Robert B. Fiske | Republican | |||||
– | William M. Tendy | Republican | Jimmy Carter | |||||
52 | – | John S. Martin Jr. | Democratic | |||||
53 | – | Rudy Giuliani | Republican | Ronald Reagan | ||||
– | Benito Romano | Republican | George H. W. Bush | |||||
54 | – | Otto G. Obermaier | Republican | |||||
55 | – | Mary Jo White | Unaffiliated[10] | Bill Clinton | ||||
56 | – | James Comey | Republican[11] | George W. Bush | ||||
– | David N. Kelley | Democratic | ||||||
57 | – | Michael J. Garcia | Republican | |||||
– | Lev Dassin | Unaffiliated | ||||||
58 | – | Preet Bharara | Democratic | Barack Obama | ||||
– | Joon Kim | Donald Trump | ||||||
– | Geoffrey Berman | Republican | ||||||
June 20, 2020 – October 10, 2021 | Audrey Strauss | Democratic | ||||||
59 | October 10, 2021 – present | Damian Williams | Democratic | Joe Biden |
The Showtime drama series Billions is loosely based on Preet Bharara's prosecution of SAC Capital and other hedge funds.[12]
The ABC legal drama For the People depicts new defense attorneys and prosecutors working in the Southern District of New York.
The 2020 Netflix series documents the work of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Southern District of New York against the Five Families of the Italian American Mafia in the 1980s.