The
move came shortly after Trump,
in a
television interview, blasted the Justice Department, which oversees the special counsel's investigation.
Though he has worked for Michael Bloomberg, Christine Quinn, Bruce Ratner, Scott Stringer, Joe Lieberman, Charlie Crist, Caroline Kennedy, the New York Stock Exchange and Benjamin Netanyahu — or maybe because he already
moves in such powerful circles, and no longer feels the need to market himself — Isay has become a private person, loath to appear on
television or at political events, reluctant to take
interviews and, usually, entirely uninterested
in discussing himself.