O’Melveny & Myers partner Lisa Monaco, the Biden administration’s pick for deputy U.S. attorney general, revealed earning nearly $700,000 from the law firm for work that included advising clients, including Harvard University, Apple Inc. and ExxonMobil Corp., according to a newly disclosed financial statement that was submitted as part of the nomination process.

Monaco, a nonequity partner serving as co-chairwoman of the firm’s data-security and privacy practice, earned hundreds of thousands of dollars in income for work outside of O’Melveny, the disclosure also showed. Monaco reported receiving about $175,000 in director fees from Accenture Federal Services; $115,000 in director fees from the health care tech firm Cognosante LLC; and $125,000 from New York University School of Law, where she served as a fellow on national security issues and taught a law seminar.

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