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DRUGS |
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Expert Working
Group
David
Aufhauser, Managing Director of UBS, is a member of the Management
Committee and the Board of the Investment Bank. He serves as the
Global General Counsel of the Investment Bank, and as UBS AG General
Counsel for the Americas. Prior to joining UBS, David was the General
Counsel of the U.S. Department of Treasury, supervising more than
1600 lawyers in the Department’s Banking & Finance, International
Affairs and Enforcement groups, and in the Internal Revenue Service,
the U.S. Bureau of Customs, the Office of Foreign Asset Controls,
the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, and the Office of Terrorist
Financing.
Derek
Bambauer is a research fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet
& Society at Harvard Law School. He is a member of the OpenNet
Initiative, a research partnership that studies, analyzes, and documents
filtering and censorship of Internet communication by states worldwide.
His research interests include intellectual property, technical
and legal regulation of information, issues related to Internet
messaging, and the interplay between legal and technical enforcement.
Scott
Bradner has been involved in the design, operation and use of
data networks at Harvard University since the early days of the
ARPANET. He was involved in the design of the original Harvard data
networks, the Longwood Medical Area network (LMAnet) and New England
Academic and Research Network (NEARnet). He was founding chair of
the technical committees of LMAnet, NEARnet and the COrporation
for Research and Enterprise Network (CoREN).
Robert
Carswell is counsel and former senior partner of Shearman &
Sterling. Mr. Carswell served as Deputy Secretary of the Treasury
1977-1981 and as Special Assistant to the Secretary of the Treasury
1970-1974.
Wilson
M. Compton, M.D., M.P.E., is Director of the Division of Epidemiology,
Services and Prevention Research at the National Institute on Drug
Abuse (NIDA) of the National Institutes of Health. Prior to joining
NIDA, Dr. Compton was Associate Professor of Psychiatry at Washington
University in Saint Louis. In these areas of research, Dr. Compton
has authored over 75 articles and chapters, and several diagnostic
interviews.
Kenneth
Dreifach has served as Chief of New York Attorney General Eliot
Spitzer’s Internet Bureau since 2001. The Internet Bureau has been
a leader nationwide in combating a wide range of deceptive and illegal
online practices, involving consumer fraud and false advertising,
electronic transactions, spam, spyware, violations of consumer privacy,
online gambling, and web accessibility for disabled persons.
Mathea
Falco, J.D., is President of Drug Strategies, a non-profit research
institute in Washington, D.C. that promotes more effective approaches
to the nation’s drug problems. She is also Associate Professor of
Public Health, Weill Medical College/Cornell University in New York
City.
Robert
F. Forman, Ph.D. is Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry,
at the Center for Studies of Addiction, University of Pennsylvania
School of Medicine; and Senior Investigator and Director of Technology
Transfer at the Treatment Research Institute. Since January 2003,
he has been monitoring the availability of websites offering to
sell controlled substances without prescriptions. Other areas of
research include the development of informatics-based performance
improvement solutions and clinical interventions.
Ambassador
Robert Gelbard an international business consultant, works globally
on risk and crisis management, and international, defense and homeland
security issues. During his more than three decades in the State
Department, his key assignments included President Clinton's Special
Envoy to the Balkans, Ambassador to Indonesia and Bolivia and Assistant
Secretary of State for Counter Terrorism, International Narcotics
and Law Enforcement.
Gary
Haff is Chief of the Financial Investigations Section for the
DEA where he has been with DEA since 1987, starting as a special
agent in the Money Laundering Group in New York and later being
named group supervisor of that unit. In September 2001, Mr. Haff
moved into Financial Operations at the DEA Headquarters. He was
appointed unit chief of the Financial Operations Europe, Asia, Africa,
and the Far East unit in September 2004. Prior to joining the DEA,
Mr. Haff was with the Houston (TX) Police Department.
Micheal
Heald serves as the Executive Assistant to the Deputy Chief
of the DEA’s Office of Enforcement Operations at DEA Headquarters
located in Arlington, VA. Mr. Heald began his employment as a DEA
Special Agent in the San Francisco Field Division in 1985. While
assigned in San Francisco, Special Agent Heald was a member of the
Clandestine Laboratory Task Force and conducted investigations involving
all aspects of dangerous drug manufacturing and distribution. Mr.
Heald became Chief of the Dangerous Drugs and Chemical Section in
2003.
Philip
Heymann is James Barr Ames Professor of Law at Harvard Law School.
From his first job as clerk to U.S. Supreme Court Justice John Harlan
to his post as Deputy U.S. Attorney General (1993-94) he has had
extensive and varied government experience. A former Fulbright
Scholar with degrees from Yale University and Harvard Law School,
he has been Assistant U.S. Attorney General in charge of the Criminal
Division (1978-81) and Assistant to the Solicitor General in the
Justice Department, Acting Administrator of the State Department's
Bureau of Security and Consular Affairs, Deputy Assistant Secretary
of State for the Bureau of International Organizations and Executive
Assistant to the Undersecretary of State.
Stephen
Heymann is Chief of the Appellate and Computer Crime Section
of the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Boston. During his nearly twenty-year
career as a Federal prosecutor, he has conducted the first court-authorized
electronic surveillance of a computer network, resulting in the
identification and charging of a foreign national breaking into
U.S. military computer systems from Argentina; and brought one of
the first Federal prosecutions of a computer hacker to have compromised
an element of our critical infrastructure, a juvenile who had electronically
blacked out vital services to the control tower of a regional airport.
Ambassador
Melvyn Levitsky is Professor of International Relations and
Public Administration at Syracuse University’s Maxwell School of
Citizenship and Public Affairs and a Distinguished Fellow at the
Maxwell School’s Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs. In October
2003 Ambassador Levitsky was elected by a vote of the United Nations
Economic and Social Council to a seat on the International Narcotics
Control Board (INCB), an independent UN body of experts headquarted
in Vienna and responsible for monitoring and promoting standards
of drug control established by international treaties. During his
35-year career as a U.S. diplomat, Ambassador Levitsky was Ambassador
to Brazil from 1994-98 and before that held such senior positions
as Assistant Secretary of State for International Narcotics Matters.
Thomas
McLellan, Ph. D., is a psychologist, Professor of Psychiatry
at the University of Pennsylvania and the Director of the Treatment
Research Institute in Philadelphia. Dr. McLellan and his colleagues
created measurement instruments such as the Addiction Severity Index
(ASI) and the Treatment Services Review (TSR). These instruments
have been translated into over 20 languages and are the most widely
used instruments of their kind in the world.
Jerry
Mechling is Director of the e-Government Executive Education
Project and lecturer in public policy at Harvard’s Kennedy School
of Government. His studies focus on the impacts of information and
digital technologies on individual, organizational, and societal
issues. He consults on these and other topics with public and private
organizations locally and internationally.
Robert
B. Millman, MD, was trained in Internal Medicine and Psychiatry
at the New York Hospital Cornell Medical Center. He began his research
career at the Rockefeller University, in the Laboratory of Vincent
Dole. He is Saul P. Steinberg Distinguished Professor of Psychiatry
and Public Health at the Weill Medical College of Cornell University
and Director of the Drug and Alcohol Abuse Treatment and Research
Service at the New York Presbyterian Hospital.
Superintendent Derek
Ogden is the Acting Director General of Drugs and Organized
Crime. Within this scope of responsibility he is accountable to
manage the multiple programs of drugs, source witness protection,
the undercover unit and organized crime investigative units across
the country. In this position, Superintendent Ogden assumes a leading
role in ensuring an operational liaison with key law enforcement
partners and government departments/agencies.
Morris
Panner is the CEO of OpenAir, Inc., an enterprise software company
providing business analytics and management tools to professional
services organizations. Previously, Panner was with the US Justice
Department, serving as an Assistant United States Attorney in the
Southern District of New York in the Organized Crime and Terrorism
Unit, as the Resident Legal Advisor in the US Embassy in Bogota,
Colombia and as Principal Deputy Chief of the US Justice Department's
Narcotics Section, directing international narcotics prosecutions.
Joseph
T. Rannazzisi is Deputy Chief of Enforcement Operations for
the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). In this position,
Mr. Rannazzisi supports the Chief of Enforcement Operations in coordinating
all of DEA’s Domestic and International efforts, including initiatives
involving investigations of pharmaceuticals and precursor chemicals.
James
Rawson is Manager of the National Clearinghouse on Internet
Prescribing for the Federation of State Medical Boards. He also
served as State Legislative Liason for the Federation of State Medical
Boards. He is a member of NASCSA and NADDI. Mr. Rawson received
a Bachelor and Master of Arts from the University of Texas at Arlington.
Mary
Rundle is a fellow with the Berkman Center for Internet and
Society at Harvard Law School and a non-resident fellow with the
Center for Internet and Society at Stanford Law School. Through
the Net Dialogue project, she has been mapping ways in which governments
are working in international organizations to iron out common policies
for the networked world. Prior to these appointments Mary served
as a Legal Affairs Officer for the World Trade Organization in Geneva,
Switzerland.
Scott
D. Schafer is an Assistant Attorney General in the Consumer
Protection and Antitrust Division of the Massachusetts Attorney
General’s Office. Mr. Schafer investigates and prosecutes persons
and entities that violate the Massachusetts Consumer Protection
Act, with a specialized focus on electronic commerce and telecommunications
issues.
Steve
Schorr is the Chief of the Cargo Control Branch at U.S. Customs
and Border Protection (CBP) responsible for ensuring the legal and
regulatory compliance of all imported merchandise that is not immediately
released into the commerce of the United States. Mr. Schorr also
oversees CBP’s pharmaceutical importation program. He is Chairman
of an interagency task force that establishes national policy and
conducts enforcement operations to address illegal prescription
drugs purchased by U.S. residents over the Internet.
Alan
M. Silberstein is President of Silco Associates, providing management
advice to the financial services industry. He brings his clients
30 years of experience in consumer financial services, payments,
and turnaround management. He has also worked with a number of
emerging companies in related fields, most recently helping to launch
DebtResolve. Alan served as President and CEO of Western Union
and EVP of First Data Corporation, its parent, in 2000-2001. Prior
to this position, Alan held positions as CEO of Claim Services at
Travelers Property Casualty Insurance, head of Midlantic Bank’s
Retail Banking business, and Director of Consumer Banking at Chemical
Bank.
Dr.
Jack Stein is Deputy Director for the Division of Epidemiology,
Services, and Prevention Research of the National Institute on Drug
Abuse (NIDA). Previous positions at NIDA include Chief, Services
Research Branch and Deputy Director, Office of Science Policy and
Communications. A clinical social worker by training, Dr. Stein
has extensive experience in prevention, treatment, and policy issues
related to drug abuse and HIV/AIDS service delivery with a particular
interest in the translation and application of research-based findings
to real world settings. Before entering government, Dr. Stein was
the Executive Director of the Health Education and Resource Organization,
Maryland's largest AIDS service organization. He has developed
numerous curricula for health care professionals and has conducted
training and technical assistance on a community, national, and
federal level on various issues related to drug abuse.
Jonathan
Zittrain is the Jack N. and Lillian R. Berkman Assistant Professor
for Entrepreneurial Legal Studies at Harvard Law School and a co-founder
of its Berkman Center for Internet & Society. His research
includes the technologies and politics of control of Internet architecture
and protocols, the influence of private intermediaries upon online
behavior, and the future of open source software.
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