Gurbir Grewal, the SEC's new Director of the Division of Enforcement

Gurbir S. Grewal
Today, the SEC announced Gurbir S. Grewal would resign his position as New Jersey Attorney General to become director of the Enforcement Division at the Securities and Exchange Commission effective July 26, 2021.
In a statement New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy, he called Grewal an “invaluable member of our administration.”
Why might he want to leave the Attorney general role now?
If wants to run for governor in 2025, he would need to leave his post as New Jersey attorney general soon.
In February, the New Jersey Senate approved legislation that would bar prosecutors and the state attorney general from seeking or holding elected office for three years after they leave their position.
This right here leads me to believe he is going to be in the position longer than Alex Oh's half-a-Scaramucci.
So what did he get done as New Jersey Attorney General?
His office put out guidance surrounding the passage of a constitutional amendment allowing recreational marijuana.
The Department of Law and Public Safety, which he heads, unveiled a new use-of-force dashboard so the public can view when police use violence in the line of duty.
On May 1, 2019, launched an investigation into prior corporate tax loopholes afforded by New Jersey's Development Authority.
In 2018, his office began bringing environmental lawsuits against alleged polluters again, for the first time in a decade.
Grewal also began suing out-of-state gun retailers for sales in New Jersey that ran afoul of state law, while promoting the state’s new stricter gun-control laws passed under Murphy’s administration.
Also in 2018, he limited state law enforcement’s cooperation with federal immigration authorities in a directive that drew a clear line between the responsibilities of New Jersey’s 36,000 law enforcement officers and federal immigration authorities.
Before becoming attorney general, Grewal was the Bergen County prosecutor, the top law enforcement office of New Jersey’s most populous county. He also served as an assistant U.S. attorney in the criminal division in the U.S. Attorney’s Office in New Jersey. He was the head of the economic crimes unit from 2014 to 2016, overseeing major white-collar and cybercrime prosecutions in the state.
I have been the first to shit on the SEC's enforcement actions, but Gary Gensler's personnel choices have been solid, with Grewal a seeming solid addition.
Gary Gensler is trying to build a team and transform the SEC (not completely unlike RC and GameStop), and it is all going to come down to execution.
We know from the GameStop filing that the SEC is investigating/ asking multiple companies for data. Something is coming and Grewal is now heading it.
Buckle up.