Kent Richard Markus is an American attorney. He currently works as bar counsel and general counsel for the Columbus Bar Association. Before working at the CBA, he served as a Senior Advisor in the Director's Office and Director of Enforcement at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Markus served as Counselor and Chief Legal Counsel to Ohio Governor Ted Strickland and as a law professor Capital University Law School. During the administration of President Clinton, he was a senior official at the United States Department of Justice. Markus was also a federal judicial nominee to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, though his nomination was never voted upon by the Senate.
After graduating from law school, Markus returned home to Cleveland and clerked for U.S. District JudgeAlvin Krenzler from 1984 to 1986. He then worked at an Ohio law firm doing plaintiff's civil rights work and representing labor unions from 1986 to 1989, while also serving as an adjunct law professor at Cleveland–Marshall College of Law from 1986 to 1988. He left to manage then-State Senator Lee Fisher's campaign for Ohio Attorney General, and subsequently served as Fisher's Chief of Staff. Two years later, Markus became the Executive Director and Chief of Staff at the Democratic National Committee before joining the United States Department of Justice in 1994. At the Department of Justice, Markus worked as Counsel to Deputy Attorney GeneralJamie Gorelick in 1994, Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General, and Acting Assistant Attorney General for Legislative Affairs from 1995 to 1996. He then served as Counselor to Attorney General Janet Reno and Deputy Chief of Staff from 1996 to 1998. Upon the birth of his son, he returned to Ohio where he founded the National Center for Adoption Law & Policy at Capital University Law School and taught what was at that time the nation's only regular law school class regarding the law of adoption. The Center is known, today, as the Family and Youth Law Center at Capital University Law School.
Nomination to the Sixth Circuit
On February 9, 2000, Bill Clinton nominated Markus to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit to take the place of David Aldrich Nelson, who had assumed senior status. With the U.S. Senate controlled by Republicans during Clinton's second term, Markus' nomination languished. Despite Markus waging a high-profile lobbying effort to win confirmation to the Sixth Circuit seat and the fact that he had the support of both of his home-state Republican senators, no hearing was ever scheduled on his nomination by the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee, and no confirmation vote ever was taken by the full Senate. When George W. Bush became president in 2001, he subsequently withdrew 62 executive and judicial nominations, including that of Markus. In 2001, Bush nominated Jeffrey Sutton to the seat to which Markus had been nominated. Sutton was confirmed on April 29, 2003.
Later career
On January 8, 2007, Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland announced that Markus would be taking a leave of absence from Capital University to serve as Ted Strickland's Chief Legal Counsel. He later also served as Counselor to the Governor. Markus' name came up as a possible interim replacement for former Ohio Attorney General Marc Dann, who resigned from office on May 14, 2008. In January 2009, Markus suggested that he be nominated by President Barack Obama to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio. However, in July 2009, Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown announced that he would be recommending then-U.S. Magistrate Judge Timothy Black for the seat. The Senate confirmed Black in May 2010. In the Spring of 2011, Markus became the Deputy Director for Enforcement at the newly-established Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. He became the Bureau's Enforcement Director in January 2012. In February 2015, Markus became a Senior Advisor at the Bureau in the Office of the Director. He was succeeded as Enforcement Director by Tony Alexis.
Personal life
Markus is married to Capital University Law School professor Susan Gilles. They have one son.