Patrick F. Philbin is an American lawyer who served as Deputy Counsel to the President and Deputy Assistant to the President in the Office of White House Counsel in the Donald J. Trump administration.[1] He previously served in the Department of Justice during the George W. Bush administration.[2]: 27
During the Bush administration, Philbin reviewed the Torture Memos and raised concerns with John Yoo and Jay Bybee about their contents.[9] An investigation by the Office of Professional Responsibility concluded that Philbin did not commit any professional misconduct and appropriately raised his concerns about the shortcomings of the Bybee opinion.[2]: 257–258
According to James Comey, Acting Attorney General at the time, Philbin was present in March 2004 when Comey rushed to John Ashcroft's hospital bed to try to prevent other Bush officials – White House Chief of Staff Andy Card and the man who was then White House counsel, Alberto Gonzales – from persuading the very sick Attorney General to reverse Comey's decision as Acting Attorney General to not approve renewal of the controversial warrantless wiretap program during the war on terror.[10][11] Philbin was "one of the people who started the legal review of the spying program that concluded the program was illegal", and Comey testified that Philbin's career suffered for his support of Comey's intervention between Gonzales and Ashcroft; according to Comey, Vice PresidentDick Cheney blocked Philbin's appointment to the position of Principal Deputy Solicitor General, denying him the honor of working on behalf of the government before the Supreme Court.[12][7]
Philbin returned to private practice in 2005,[2]: 27 returning as a partner to Kirkland & Ellis, where he focused on appellate litigation, complex litigation, and data security.[4][2]: 27 In 2019, Philbin was appointed as Deputy Counsel to the President and Deputy Assistant to the President in the Office of White House Counsel in the Trump Administration.[1] In 2020, he was appointed to the defense team that represented President Trump in the first Senate impeachment trial.[13]
^In his final year of law school, Philbin contributed a Note to the Harvard Law Review regarding medieval covenants. See Philbin, Patrick (1992). "Proving the Will of Another: The Specialty Requirement in Covenant". Harvard Law Review. 105 (8): 2001–2020. doi:10.2307/1341555. JSTOR1341555. Authorship is not shown on the cited web page, but was verified by a separate JSTOR search.