Philip Heymann

Philip B. Heymann ( born October 30, 1932) is an American lawyer who was former Deputy U.S. Attorney General.

Life

After schooling Heymann studied at the University of Paris and then philosophy at Yale University and completed this study in 1954 with a Bachelor of Arts (BA Philosophy). A subsequent post-graduate studies in law at the Law School of Harvard University he graduated with a scholarship from the Fulbright Program from 1960 with a Juris Doctor (JD).

After graduating, he became secretary ( Law Clerk ) by John Marshall Harlan II, a judge of the Supreme Court of the United States. He then joined the government service and was initially 1961 to 1965 employees in the U.S. Solicitor General Office, Ministry of Justice.

He then joined the staff of the Foreign Ministry, where he was successively executive assistant to an Under Secretary, Deputy Assistant Foreign Minister ( Deputy Assistant Secretary of State ) International organizations and employees in the Office of Security and Consular Affairs. At times, he was also an employee of the Authority Intelligence Sciences of the Central Intelligence Agency ( CIA Intelligence Science Board ).

Once he was in the Watergate affair 1973-1975 associated prosecutor, he was in 1978 U.S. Assistant Attorney General and was in this capacity until 1981, also head of the Department of Criminal Law ( Criminal Division ) of the Ministry of Justice.

After a subsequent several years as a professor at Harvard Law School and the takeover of the local James Barr Ames Professor in 1989, he was most recently from 1993 to 1994 as U.S. Deputy Attorney General Assistant Attorney General in the administration of U.S. President Bill Clinton. One of his employees and consultants during this time was Michael Bennet today's Democratic U.S. Senator for Colorado.

Publications

Heymann published next to some books, some of which dealt with the subject of terrorism. Among the most famous publications include:

  • The Politics of Public Management (1987 )
  • Terrorism, Freedom, and Security: Winning Without War (2003)
  • Terrorism and America: A Commonsense Strategy for a Democratic Society (2005, co-author Juliette Kayyem )
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