Ali Ahmad is Acting Deputy for Cyber at the Counterintelligence and Export Control Section of the National Security Division. He supervises investigations into computer intrusions and related crimes that implicate U.S. national security or are conducted by those working for foreign nations. Prior to working at NSD, Ali worked as an Assistant United States Attorney and Computer Hacking and Intellectual Property prosecutor with the Eastern District of Arkansas, and as a civil rights prosecutor with the DOJ Civil Rights Division’s Criminal Section.
Hadley Etienne
Supervisory Special Agent, Federal Bureau of Investigation
Supervisory Special Agent Hadley Etienne obtained a Computer and Information Technology Bachelor's of Science degree at Rochester Institute of Technology. Etienne has worked for IBM as a System/Network Administrator and with Susquehanna Investment Group on the American Stock Exchange as a Systems and Network Analyst and Programmer. In 2005, Etienne began his career with the Federal Bureau of Investigation and was assigned to the FBI’s Washington Field Office in Washington, D.C where Etienne investigated Violent Crimes and Major Offenders (Fugitive/Bank Robbery Task Force) in the DC metro areas. In 2008, Etienne was transferred to the Major Cyber Crime Squad where he investigated crimes related to computer intrusion, Botnet targeting, wire/bank fraud and the infringement of Intellectual Property Rights. In 2014, Etienne deployed to Bagram, Afghanistan on a temporary duty assignment to investigate contact and corruption fraud on the International Contract and Corruption Cask Force (ICCTF). Most recently, Etienne served as U.S. Cyber Assistant Legal Attache to France where he investigated Cyber Crime with the French Law Enforcement. Etienne currently serves as the Supervisory Special Agent of the Major Cyber Crime Squad at the Washington Field Office where he serves a dynamic team of Agents investigating financially motivated computer intrusions.
Jeremy Grant was the founding leader of the National Program Office for the National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace and senior executive adviser for identity management at the National Institute of Standards and Technology. He led the White House’s initiative to catalyze a marketplace of secure, easy-to-use, privacy-enhancing identity solutions for online services through government and private sector partnerships. Grant is now managing director of technology business strategy for Venable.
Kurt Sanger
Deputy General Counsel, US Cyber Command
Lieutenant Colonel Kurt Sanger, U.S. Marine Corps, has served as a military justice defense counsel and prosecutor, Legal Advisor to the Afghan National Army General Staff, Operations and International Law Instructor at Marine Corps University, and as a planning officer with U.S. Central Command. He earned a degree in National Security Law from
Georgetown University in 2015. From 2014 to 2017, Lieutenant Colonel
Sanger served as the Staff Judge Advocate for U.S. Marine Corps Forces
Cyberspace Command. He has been assigned to U.S. Cyber Command since 2017, serving first as the Chief Judge Advocate for Plans, Policy, Partnerships, and Legislative Affairs, then as the Chief Judge Advocate for National Security Law, and now as the command’s Deputy General
Counsel. Lieutenant Colonel Sanger will retire from the Marine Corps in November 2022.
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