George W. Bush in April 2004 In August 2003 Thompson left the Justice Department and was a senior fellow at the
Brookings Institution for a year before accepting the position of senior vice-president for government affairs and general counsel at
PepsiCo in
Purchase, New York. Since 2011, he has served as the John A. Sibley Professor in Corporate and Business Law at the
University of Georgia School of Law, where he teaches corporate responsibility and white collar criminal law, and serves on the school’s Dean Rusk International Law Center Council. Thompson was named in the press as a leading candidate for Attorney General after
John Ashcroft resigned on November 9, 2004. Thompson, if selected, would have been the first
African-American ever to head the
Justice Department. Instead,
Alberto Gonzales was selected as Ashcroft's replacement. Later, Thompson's name was mentioned as a possible candidate to replace Supreme Court Justice
Sandra Day O'Connor. With the resignation of Gonzales in August 2007, Thompson's name again surfaced a candidate for Attorney General. He supported former
New York Mayor
Rudy Giuliani in the
2008 presidential election, and the American Bar Association mentioned Thompson again as a possible Attorney General or Supreme Court justice during a potential
John McCain administration. Thompson was named independent corporate monitor overseeing compliance reforms at
Volkswagen AG for the next three years by the U.S. government on April 21, 2017. Thompson and his wife Brenda are noted collectors of art by African American artists. In 2012 they donated works of art to the
Georgia Museum of Art and endowed a curatorial chair there. An exhibition of the works occurred at the Museum in 2017. Thompson has been a member of the Board of Curators for the
Georgia Historical Society since 2020. == See also ==