Close X
Friday, January 10, 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

German court foils bid to make Snowden testify in Berlin

German court foils bid to make Snowden testify in Berlin
Germany's top court Friday threw out an opposition bid to get whistle-blower Edward Snowden invited to testify in Berlin before a parliamentary committee...

German court foils bid to make Snowden testify in Berlin

India visit productive and positive: Putin

In a meeting here with the permanent members of the Russian Security Council, Putin described his India visit Dec 10-11 as "productive and...

India visit productive and positive: Putin

Indian charged with rape, sodomy of Indonesian woman

Indian charged with rape, sodomy of Indonesian woman
An Indian national was charged in a sessions court here with three counts of raping and sodomising an Indonesian woman...

Indian charged with rape, sodomy of Indonesian woman

CIA chief admits use of brutal interrogation techniques

CIA chief admits use of brutal interrogation techniques
Some officers of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) used brutal techniques on terrorist suspects and there was no proof of useful information yielded...

CIA chief admits use of brutal interrogation techniques

IS militants bomb homes of military and police in Iraq

IS militants bomb homes of military and police in Iraq
Islamic State (IS) militants blew up the homes of Iraqi military and police personnel as well as members of the Shabak religious minority Thursday in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul....

IS militants bomb homes of military and police in Iraq

UN Adopts Modi's Yoga Day Proposal, Backed By 175 Countries

UN Adopts Modi's Yoga Day Proposal, Backed By 175 Countries
In a huge global endorsement for yoga, 175 out of 193 members of the UN, countries as diverse as the US and Syria, Russia and Britain, and China and the Philippines, agreed by acclamation Wednesday to declare June 21 the International Yoga Day, recognizing the ancient Indian science's "holistic approach to health and well-being".

UN Adopts Modi's Yoga Day Proposal, Backed By 175 Countries