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Speculation Swirls Around Top Justice Job

By Richard B. Schmitt, Times Staff Writer|November 05, 2004

WASHINGTON — A top candidate to succeed U.S. Atty. Gen. John Ashcroft professed no interest in the job Thursday, as speculation mounted that Ashcroft might be the first Cabinet member to leave the Bush administration since the president's reelection.

Larry D. Thompson, Ashcroft's former deputy, said he was "fully engaged and committed" to a senior executive position he took last summer with PepsiCo in Purchase, N.Y., according to a statement issued by the soft drink and snack foods company.


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Thompson, 59, who held the deputy post until August 2003, was highly regarded for his running of the day-to-day affairs of the Justice Department. He also led a department crackdown on corporate crime.

The statement did not say whether Thompson would reject an offer to be attorney general if Bush asked.

Thompson would be the first African American attorney general.

Neither the company nor Thompson would elaborate.

Ashcroft has been a major player in Bush's war against terrorism, attracting criticism from civil rights groups and compiling a mixed record in prosecuting terrorism suspects. He has also suffered health problems.

Bush said Thursday that there would be changes in his Cabinet, but that no decisions had been made.

Ashcroft is expected to submit his resignation in a few days, carrying through on a long-standing promise to give the president full discretion in selecting top aides for a second term. However, aides to Bush said he had not asked Cabinet secretaries to submit resignations between terms, as some past presidents had done.

Ashcroft may already have indicated his intention to resign to the president, one source said, and the White House has begun at least an informal search for his replacement. A White House spokesman declined to comment.

Besides Thompson, the field of potential candidates includes White House counsel Alberto R. Gonzales, Bush-Cheney campaign chairman and former Montana Gov. Marc Racicot and former New York Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani, who gained fame as a federal prosecutor of organized crime.

Sunny Mindel, a spokeswoman for Giuliani, a possible Republican presidential candidate in 2008, sought to dampen speculation that Giuliani, also a top Justice official during the Reagan administration, might be interested in a second tour at the department.

"He is very happy in the private sector," Mindel said.

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