Walmart taps former U.S. Attorney as next chief legal officer
America’s largest retailer is welcoming a seasoned legal veteran to its C-suite.
Walmart Inc. has named Erin Nealy Cox as the company’s next executive VP of global governance and chief legal officer, and corporate secretary. Cox will assume responsibilities on April 13, 2026.
Cox joins Walmart from Kirkland & Ellis LLP, where she has served as a partner in the Government, Regulatory & Internal Investigations Practice Group since 2021. She previously served as the United States Attorney for the Northern District of Texas from 1999 to 2008, where she led a broad range of federal investigations and prosecutions, including matters involving white-collar crime, national security, cybercrime and public corruption. During her tenure, she was appointed to and then chaired the Attorney General’s Advisory Committee.
Before her U.S. Attorney appointment, Cox was an executive managing director at Stroz Friedberg, a global cybersecurity and risk management firm, where she led its global incident response practice. Her earlier career also included nearly a decade of service as an Assistant U.S. Attorney in the same district she served as U.S. Attorney.
“To lead global governance for a company of our scale and complexity, you need a leader who has thrived in the most demanding environments. Erin is exactly that leader,” said John Furner, who was promoted to the role of Walmart Inc. CEO on Feb. 1, replacing Doug McMillon. “She brings a rare combination of legal strategy and operational rigor that will be essential as we continue to navigate the new era of retail, while staying true to our purpose of helping people save money and live better.”
Nealy Cox will oversee Walmart’s Global Governance organization, which includes global legal, compliance, ethics, corporate governance, digital citizenship, enterprise risk management, litigation, aviation, investigations, and corporate security, including Walmart’s Global Security Operations Center.
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“Walmart is a company defined not just by its scale, but by its heart; and I am honored to join the team at such a pivotal moment,” said Nealy Cox. “Throughout my career in both the public and private sectors, I’ve found that the best strategies are always rooted in purpose. Walmart has a clear purpose, one I believe in deeply, and I’m excited to dive in and help our teams continue to serve our customers and members when, how and where they want.”
Bentonville, Ark.-based Walmart operates more than 10,750 stores and numerous e-commerce websites in 19 countries.
