Semiconductor company ASML hired Maryam Cope, previously government affairs director at the Semiconductor Industry Association, as its head of U.S. government affairs, she said in a LinkedIn post.
CBP Deputy Commissioner Robert Perez plans to retire from the agency after the Department of Homeland Security said it wouldn't be keeping Perez in that role, according to a report in The Washington Examiner. Current Acting CBP Commissioner Troy Miller is expected to take the Deputy Commissioner position, it said. CBP didn't comment.
Alvarez & Marsal Taxand hired Michael McGee to lead the consultancy's new Global Trade and Customs practice, it said in a May 12 news release. McGee was previously the global director of International Trade Regulations at BP America. “The political landscape and the pandemic have led to more regulations, increasingly complex tax regimes and the need to redraw supply chains. As a result, there is greater demand for expert tax advisory services, including for global trade and tariffs and duties,” said Ernesto Perez, managing director of the Houston firm. “In line with A&M’s leadership, action, results approach, A&M Taxand is responding to the shifting business environment by expanding and strengthening specialized tax services to maximize value for clients.” A&M said McGee has “expert knowledge of U.S. Customs Law, Department of Commerce Export Administration Regulations, Department of Treasury Office of Foreign Asset Control, and Department of Commerce Antiboycott Regulations.”
Thea Lee, a former AFL-CIO trade economist and top official for 20 years, will be leading the Department of Labor's Bureau of International Labor Affairs, which is involved in both enforcement of the USMCA labor chapter and in investigating forced labor and the worst forms of child labor. The AFL-CIO reacted to the news of her appointment by saying “there is no better person to help strengthen enforcement of labor standards that increase the power of workers in the U.S. and around the world. She will also help shape policies to end forced labor and egregious worker rights violations throughout global supply chains.” The job is not one that requires Senate confirmation.
Seth DuCharme, previously the acting U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of New York and principal associate deputy attorney general of the U.S., joined Bracewell as a partner in its government enforcement and investigations practice, the firm said in a May 10 news release. “DuCharme will focus his practice at Bracewell on advising companies and individuals on matters related to cybersecurity and breach response, Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) diligence and litigation, export controls, sanctions compliance and anti-money laundering,” the firm said.
International Bond & Marine hired Lee Barther as vice president of operations, the company said in a May 3 news release. Barther previously “spent the majority of his career at C.A. Shea & Company,” IB&M said. IB&M was acquired by OneBeacon Insurance Group in September 2020.
Latham & Watkins hired Damara Chambers, previously with Vinson & Elkins, as a partner in the Litigation & Trial Department and a member of the White Collar Defense & Investigations practice, Latham said in a news release. “Chambers is a leading lawyer who focuses on cross-border investment matters, including national security reviews by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), the Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency (DCSA), and the Department of Energy, among other agencies,” the firm said.
Angela Ellard, chief Republican trade counsel on the House Ways and Means Committee, will be one of the four deputy directors-general at the World Trade Organization, Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala announced May 4. Ellard has served on the committee staff since 1995.
Arent Fox hired David Tafuri as a partner, Richard Griffiths as a senior adviser and Jasmine Zaki as an associate in the International Trade and Investment practice, the law firm said in an April 29 news release. All three previously worked at Dentons.
Celeste Drake, who often opposed trade agreements in her eight years leading trade and globalization policy at the AFL-CIO, was named Made in America director, a new job at the Office of Management and Budget. Most recently, she was a top lobbyist at the Directors Guild of America. The Biden administration said Drake “will shape and implement Federal procurement and financial management policy to help carry out the President’s vision of a future made in all of America by all of America’s workers -- including minority entrepreneurs and small businesses in every region in our country.”