Jennifer L. Moore Named Assistant Director of the Security Division

Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI Crime News (b)

Director Christopher Wray has named Jennifer L. Moore as the assistant director of the Security Division at FBI Headquarters in Washington, D.C. Ms. Moore most recently served as the special agent in charge of the Intelligence and Incident Response Division at the Washington Field Office.

Ms. Moore joined the FBI in 1995 as an office automation assistant in the San Diego Field Office. She was promoted to a supervisor, then was selected as a special agent in 1998. Her first assignment as a new agent was in the Dallas Field Office, where she worked complex financial crimes and public corruption. She was promoted to supervisory special agent in 2005 and oversaw personal, physical, and information security at the office.

In 2010, Ms. Moore transferred to the Inspection Division at FBI Headquarters as a supervisor in internal investigations. She was promoted to supervisory special resident agent in 2012 and placed in charge of three resident agencies under the Las Vegas Field Office.

Ms. Moore was promoted to an assistant special agent in charge in the Louisville Field Office in Kentucky in 2015, leading the FBI’s criminal investigations throughout the state. She also oversaw the incident response teams and the administrative functions for the field office.

Ms. Moore was promoted to section chief in the Security Division at Headquarters in 2017, focusing on internal security issues. She transferred to the Strategic Realignment Project Management Office in 2019, where she oversaw the expansion of FBI Headquarters to Huntsville, Alabama; Clarksburg, West Virginia; and Pocatello, Idaho.

She was named SAC of the Intelligence and Incident Response Division at the Washington Field Office in 2019.

Prior to joining the FBI, Ms. Moore was a manager with an international marketing firm. She earned a degree in business management.

Security News in Brief: Acting Assistant Attorney General Richard A. Powers Delivers Remarks at the Symposium on Corporate Enforcement and Individual Accountability Hosted by the University of Southern California Gould School of Law

Source: United States Department of Justice News

It is an honor to speak here today, at what I know will be the first of many informative programs on the important topics of corporate enforcement and individual accountability.  This is an exciting time for the Antitrust Division, for many reasons, one of which is that just yesterday President Biden announced that he plans to nominate Jonathan Kanter as our Assistant Attorney General.  The Division’s career officials and staff—myself included—eagerly await his arrival and look forward to carrying out his priorities.  Of course, right now I can’t speak to what those priorities will be, and my remarks today should not be taken as an indication otherwise.  But I welcome the opportunity to reflect on the recent accomplishments of the Division’s Criminal Program, which I have now been leading for over three years, and shed some light on the principles underlying that work.

Defense News in Brief: Big Boots to Fill

Source: United States Navy

NORFOLK, Va. — As a U.S. Navy ship prepares to leave homeport, many Sailors say goodbye to loved ones on the pier. This is not an uncommon occurrence for Sailors, over the course of a 20-year-career; most Sailors have experienced the challenge of leaving loved ones behind on the shore as their ship departs to accomplish the mission.

Security News in Brief: KuuHuub Inc., Kuu Huub Oy and Recolor Oy to Pay Civil Penalty for Children’s Online Privacy Violations

Source: United States Department of Justice 2

The Department of Justice, together with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), today announced that KuuHuub Inc., a Canadian corporation, and two Finnish corporations, Kuu Huub Oy and Recolor Oy, have agreed to a settlement to resolve alleged violations of the FTC Act and the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act of 1998 (COPPA) associated with the companies’ “Recolor” mobile app and digital coloring book.

Security News in Brief: Palm Coast Man Sentenced To 15 Years For Illegal Possession Of A Firearm And Possession With Intent To Distribute Cocaine Base

Source: United States Department of Justice News

Jacksonville, Florida – U.S. District Judge Timothy J. Corrigan has sentenced Jerard Keaton Davis (35, Palm Coast) to 15 years in federal prison for possessing a firearm as a convicted felon and for possessing with the intent to distribute cocaine base. The court also ordered Davis to forfeit the firearm and ammunition he had possessed as part of the offense.