Close X
Thursday, January 16, 2025
ADVT 
International

Top Indian-american NSA Lawyer Rajesh De Returns To Private Practice

Darpan News Desk IANS, 21 Mar, 2015 04:58 PM
  • Top Indian-american NSA Lawyer Rajesh De Returns To Private Practice
Indian-American Rajesh "Raj" De has left his post as the top lawyer at the National Security Agency (NSA) to return to private practice as partner at the Washington law firm of Mayer Brown.
 
De, who left the spy agency Friday will rejoin the firm as a partner and head of a 35-lawyer practice in June, the Hill, a news site focusing on the US Congress reported.
 
He first made partner at Mayer Brown in 2007, before leaving for a string of government posts.
 
De, 41, became the agency's general counsel in May 2012, putting him right in the centre of the debate over leaks by former contractor Edward Snowden starting in 2013, the Hill said.
 
"It was the most challenging time in the agency's history," he was quoted as saying in an interview in The Am Law Daily.
 
"Everything was so secret, for so long, that there's still a lot of misinformation about what we do."
 
Prior to his NSA post, De worked in the Department of Justice's Office of Legal Policy and the White House.
 
The Harvard-trained lawyer "played a role in preserving the status quo" on NSA's controversial surveillance programmes, the Associated Press suggested.
 
However, De in an interview with AP "described an NSA completely at odds with the free-wheeling, all-seeing behemoth depicted by Snowden: a rule-bound, highly regulated entity that treats the private information of Americans with utmost care."
 
"Reasonable folks can disagree about what NSA should or shouldn't be doing," De was quoted as saying.
 
"But this is not a controversy over widespread abuses by a powerful intelligence apparatus, and I don't think that is by accident."
 
De is one of the highest-ranking Indian Americans in government. His parents, both doctors, immigrated to Philadelphia with $16 to their names, he said.

MORE International ARTICLES

Uzi Killing In Arizona Displays Tragic Side Of Gun Tourism As It Grows In Popularity

Uzi Killing In Arizona Displays Tragic Side Of Gun Tourism As It Grows In Popularity
LAS VEGAS, Nev. - The death of an Arizona firearms instructor by a 9-year-old girl who was firing a fully automatic Uzi displayed a tragic side of what has become a hot industry in the U.S.: gun tourism.

Uzi Killing In Arizona Displays Tragic Side Of Gun Tourism As It Grows In Popularity

UK Pakistani Community Says Racism Fears Should Have Never Prevented Reporting On Child Abuse

UK Pakistani Community Says Racism Fears Should Have Never Prevented Reporting On Child Abuse
Rotherham is a working-class town that is remarkable in its ordinariness — a collection of charmless discount stores, betting shops and kebab counters, surrounded by sleepy residential streets lined with brick houses that have seen better days.

UK Pakistani Community Says Racism Fears Should Have Never Prevented Reporting On Child Abuse

Pooches In A Pot? Pet-Mad Young Koreans Say No To Elders' Taste For Dog, Prefer To Raise Pups

Pooches In A Pot? Pet-Mad Young Koreans Say No To Elders' Taste For Dog, Prefer To Raise Pups
SEOUL, South Korea - For more than 30 years, chef and restaurant owner Oh Keum-il built her expertise in cooking one traditional South Korean delicacy: dog meat.

Pooches In A Pot? Pet-Mad Young Koreans Say No To Elders' Taste For Dog, Prefer To Raise Pups

US Journalist's Mother Pleads For His Life As Photos Show Killings By Islamic State Gunmen

US Journalist's Mother Pleads For His Life As Photos Show Killings By Islamic State Gunmen
BEIRUT - The mother of a hostage American journalist pleaded for his release Wednesday in a video directed at the Islamic State group, while new images emerged of mass killings, including masked militants shooting kneeling men after the capture of a strategic air base in Syria.

US Journalist's Mother Pleads For His Life As Photos Show Killings By Islamic State Gunmen

2 Chicago Men Sue Taxi Company After Driver Tries To Kick Them Out Of Cab For Brief Kiss

2 Chicago Men Sue Taxi Company After Driver Tries To Kick Them Out Of Cab For Brief Kiss
CHICAGO - Two Chicago men sued a taxi company this week, alleging a driver tried to kick them out of his cab because they shared a short kiss.

2 Chicago Men Sue Taxi Company After Driver Tries To Kick Them Out Of Cab For Brief Kiss

Obama approves air surveillance of IS in Syria

Obama approves air surveillance of IS in Syria
US President Barack Obama has authorised surveillance flights over Syria in a move to gain intelligence on the activities of Islamic State (IS) Sunni...

Obama approves air surveillance of IS in Syria