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To: TaxRelief
NBC? When?
60 posted on 03/25/2004 9:37:09 PM PST by Howlin
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To: Howlin
Er, I meant his partner in his company is the NBC Consultant (In other words their marketing-bases are covered. Guess Tritak gets CBS?)




Newly Appointed NBC Terrorism Analyst Roger Cressey Opens Investment Opportunities
By ECON Investor Relations

March 08, 2004

Newly Appointed NBC Terrorism Analyst Roger Cressey Opens Investment Opportunities in Homeland Defense and Security Conference, Followed by TASER International, Inc.

POINT ROBERTS, Wash., March 08, 2004 - http://www.Homelanddefensestocks.com , a global investment research portal for the Homeland Defense and Security Sector, in partnership with www.DomesticPreparedness.com, is pleased to announce the Investment Opportunities in Homeland Defense and Security Conference to be held March 30, 2004 in Washington D.C. The conference will feature dynamic public companies in the sector to present to a targeted audience of the investment community, industry and media.

The conference will also feature well-known counterterrorism expert Roger Cressey and Dan Inbar, Chairman and CTO of Homeland Security Research Corporation as speakers. Additionally Jack Mallon, Senior Managing Director, Mallon Associates, a division of C.E. Unterberg, Towbin (CEUT) who has more than 25 years of financial, legal and operational experience in the security industry will give investment perspective.




JULY 11, 2003 (COMPUTERWORLD) - WASHINGTON -- Richard A. Clarke, the former special adviser to the president for cybersecurity, has joined Arlington, Va.-based Good Harbor Consulting LLC as chairman.

Clarke joins Roger Cressey, president of the firm, who served as Clarke's chief of staff at the President's Critical Infrastructure Protection Board and before that as the director for Transnational Threats on the National Security Council.

Good Harbor Consulting plans to target a wide range of corporate clients, from the Fortune 500 to small technology start-ups, providing strategic consulting services in the areas of homeland security, cybersecurity, protection of critical infrastructure and counterterrorism.

John Tritak, former director of the Commerce Department's Critical Infrastructure Assurance Office and a longtime government thought leader on cybersecurity issues, has also joined the firm as its CEO, said Good Harbor.

In addition to the core team of Clarke, Cressey and Tritak, the company will rely on what Cressey calls a "network of subject matter experts" and has been negotiating a partnership for the past several weeks with another major security consulting business.

Cressey and Clarke plan to focus on four key areas: strategic planning, product and business strategy evaluation, partnership opportunities and strategic security risk assessment.

"For too many companies, Washington is a jumble of acronyms and an indecipherable procurement maze," according to the company's new mission statement. "Good Harbor uses its unique combination of experience in the halls of government and with the information technology industry to provide clients with partnership opportunities to better negotiate the U.S. government space and the critical infrastructure vertical markets."

Howard Schmidt, a former White House colleague of both Clarke and Cressey who is now chief security officer at eBay Inc., called the new venture a "natural progression" for Clarke and Cressey, given the years the two spent working together in government. When asked about his own plans, Schmidt said he also had considered going into private practice as a consultant and may still do so on a part-time basis.

Clarke announced in January that he was stepping down from his cybersecurity role in the U.S. government, ending a career at the National Security Council that had spanned three administrations (see story). His career was characterized by a concerted effort to enhance the government's relationship with the private-sector operators of critical infrastructure.

Shortly after leaving government, he testified at a congressional hearing that he didn't think the Bush administration was moving fast enough in organizing the National Cyber Security Center (see story). Clarke also called on Congress to fund vulnerability scanning sensors on all federal networks, and he recommended that federal agencies outsource cybersecurity projects and withhold money from vendors if the agencies get failing cybersecurity grades.
69 posted on 03/25/2004 9:59:19 PM PST by TaxRelief (God bless America and God bless our troops!)
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To: Howlin
It's all one network - ABCNBCCBSMSNBCCNNNPR - broadcast on several stations!
112 posted on 03/26/2004 2:33:06 AM PST by leprechaun9
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