Home » David Woodcock Appointed SEC Enforcement Chief

David Woodcock Appointed SEC Enforcement Chief

David Woodcock Named SEC Enforcement Chief as Agency Shifts Away From Gensler-Era Crypto Crackdown 1

Key Takeaways:

  • The SEC named David Woodcock as Enforcement Division director, effective May 4, 2026, succeeding acting director Sam Waldon.
  • Woodcock led the SEC’s Fort Worth Regional Office from 2011 to 2015, overseeing 120+ lawyers, accountants, and examiners.
  • The Atkins-led SEC is expected to shift away from the Gensler era’s crypto enforcement posture toward rules-based investor protection.

SEC Appoints David Woodcock as Enforcement Director

Woodcock joins from Gibson, Dunn and Crutcher LLP, where he serves as a partner in the Dallas and Washington, D.C. offices and chairs the firm’s Securities Enforcement Practice Group. He returns to the Commission after previously serving as Director of the SEC’s Fort Worth Regional Office from 2011 to 2015.

Sam Waldon, who has been serving as acting director, will remain in the role until Woodcock assumes the position next month.

SEC Chairman Paul Atkins said the Division has undergone a “significant course correction” aimed at restoring congressional intent by focusing on cases that protect investors and strengthen market integrity. Atkins credited Waldon for his leadership during the transition.

“I am incredibly pleased to have David rejoin the SEC at this critical time, as we continue to focus on the types of misconduct that inflict the greatest harm to investors,” Atkins stated.

Woodcock’s prior SEC tenure included leading enforcement and examinations across Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Kansas, overseeing more than 120 lawyers, accountants, and examiners. He also created and chaired the SEC’s cross-office Financial Reporting and Audit Task Force, which targeted accounting fraud and false financial statement violations.

Before joining Gibson Dunn, Woodcock served as a senior in-house corporate attorney at Exxon Mobil Corporation. He also practiced litigation at Vinson and Elkins and worked as a CPA and auditor at Price Waterhouse and Ernst and Young. He currently serves as an adjunct professor of law at Texas A&M University School of Law, where he has taught securities, ethics, and compliance for more than a decade.

Woodcock holds a bachelor’s degree in accounting from Louisiana State University and a JD from the University of Texas School of Law.

His appointment follows the brief tenure of former Acting Director Margaret A. Ryan, who reportedly departed in March 2026 after roughly six to seven months in the role amid disagreements over enforcement priorities.

The change in leadership reflects a broader shift at the agency since Gary Gensler‘s exit in January 2025. Under Gensler, the SEC pursued an aggressive enforcement strategy toward the crypto sector, bringing more than 30 crypto-related actions in 2022 alone, a 50% increase from the prior year. Major targets included Binance, Coinbase, and Kraken. Total penalties and disgorgement recovered during that period exceeded $20 billion across all enforcement activity.

Critics argued the approach created legal uncertainty, drove crypto businesses offshore, and strained agency resources. Several actions were dismissed in 2025 after post-Gensler reviews found they delivered limited investor benefit.

Woodcock’s background in accounting and financial reporting suggests the Division will continue scrutinizing disclosure violations and accounting fraud. However, analysts expect a measured shift away from expansive enforcement theories, particularly in digital assets.

“My commitment is to lead the division with the highest level of professionalism and rigor as we execute the Chairman’s vision and ensure the integrity of our financial markets,” Woodcock said.

Woodcock takes command of a team of more than 1,000 enforcement investigators, trial attorneys, accountants, and other professionals. The Division’s near-term direction will become clearer as the Atkins-led Commission continues outlining its approach to fraud, disclosure, and digital asset regulation.

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