http://www.chicagomag.com/stories/0702fitz.htm#more<snip>
He’s not exactly an international man of mystery, but Patrick J. Fitzgerald comes closer to that status than you might expect. He has such a low-key public persona that one political observer described him as “the most boring interesting guy in town.” At first glance, he appears to be a stiff. Resolute, but dull. A workaholic with a charisma deficit. Not much of a change, that is, from his predecessor, Scott Lassar.
People who have worked closely with Fitzgerald, however, say that he is more than just a priest of prosecution. They describe a quirky prankster whose sly sense of humor is cutting enough to have made him the speechwriter most in demand for roasts of departing prosecutors in New York City. This is a man who, inexplicably, keeps dirty socks in his desk drawers (“When you do a case with him, you don’t want to look for a pen,” a former colleague says). For eight years, he neglected to have the gas stove in his Brooklyn condo turned on. “Eccentric and kooky,” says a high-ranking staff member in the U.S. attorney’s office in New York City. “But he’s very lovable that way.”
Back East he’s known as “Fitzy.”
“I like to take the job seriously, but not myself,” Fitzgerald told me in a brief interview. He otherwise declined to comment.
Fitzgerald takes his job seriously enough that his best friend and former colleague, James Comey, now the U.S. attorney in New York City, suggests that thousands of people on the planet would like to put a bullet in Fitzy’s head. After all, Fitzgerald has prosecuted the most vengeful kinds of criminals: big-time mobsters and terrorists. With Comey, he put a couple of members of the notorious Gambino crime family behind bars. He was chasing associates of Osama bin Laden around the globe well before the Saudi terrorist mastermind became a household name in America. Within 48 hours of the bombings of two U.S. embassies in Africa in 1998, Fitzgerald was in Nairobi personally taking the case’s key confession.
For security reasons, he does not get mail at home. He won’t say, even by neighborhood, where home in Chicago is.
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