Commission
Member Biographies
Congressman
Porter J. Goss, Co-Chairman
Porter J. Goss (R-FL) was re-appointed by the Speaker of the
House to chair the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence
(HPSCI) for the 106th Congress. This is his second term as chairman
of the Committee, on which he is now serving his third term
as a member. Mr. Goss has represented Southwest Florida's 14th
Congressional District since 1989. In addition to chairing the
HPSCI, Mr. Goss also chairs the House Rules Committee Subcommittee
on Legislative and Budget Process.
A former Central Intelligence Agency Clandestine Services Officer,
Mr. Goss has translated his professional experience and long-standing
interest in foreign policy into legislative initiatives to further
the advancement of democracy in Haiti, Nicaragua, Panama and
El Salvador. He is also a member of the North Atlantic Assembly's
inter-parliamentary organization and an active proponent of
efforts to curtail the flow of illegal drugs into the United
States. He has actively participated in strategic deliberations
regarding U.S. foreign policy towards Iraq, North Korea and
Russia.
As Chairman of the HPSCI, Mr. Goss has led the effort to revitalize
the nation's intelligence capabilities to better meet the challenges
of the next century, particularly those involving such transnational
threats as weapons proliferation, narcotics trafficking and
terrorism. He has been a leading voice in the call to strengthen
our human intelligence and analytical capabilities, even as
we continue to invest in the best possible technology for intelligence
collection.
Senator
J. Robert Kerrey, Co-Chairman
Senator Bob Kerrey is a former Governor of Nebraska, a member
of the Senate Finance Committee, the Senate Agriculture Committee
and recently finished serving as Vice Chairman of the Senate
Select Committee on Intelligence (SSCI). He served on the Senate
Appropriations Committee from 1989 through 1996. Mr. Kerrey
first won election to the Senate in 1988 and was reelected in
1994.
Born in Lincoln, Nebraska, Mr. Kerrey attended Lincoln Public
Schools and graduated from the University of Nebraska at Lincoln
in 1966. He then earned a spot in the elite Navy SEALs and saw
combat in Vietnam. He earned the Congressional Medal of Honor,
America's highest military honor, and is currently the only
member of Congress who has received this honor. Returning from
the war and starting from scratch in 1972, Mr. Kerrey built
a chain of highly successful restaurants and health clubs that
now employ more than 900 people.
Upon taking office as Governor in 1982, Mr. Kerrey balanced
the state's budget in each of his four years in office. He also
turned the existing deficit into a seven percent surplus upon
leaving office in 1987. In addition, Mr. Kerrey initiated programs
for welfare reform, education, job training and environmental
protection that have become models for the nation.
Senator
Wayne Allard
U.S. Senator Wayne Allard is a Colorado veterinarian who served
in the U.S. House of Representatives from Colorado's Fourth
Congressional District from 1991 to 1996 before being elected
to the United States Senate in 1996. As a Colorado Congressman,
Mr. Allard served on the Joint Committee on Congressional Reform.
Mr. Allard is a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee
where he is Chairman of the Strategic Subcommittee; the Senate
Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee where he is Chairman
of the Housing and Transportation Subcommittee; and the Senate
Select Committee on Intelligence.
Mr. Allard was born in Fort Collins, Colorado in 1943 and raised
on a ranch near Walden, Colorado. He received his doctorate
of Veterinary Medicine from Colorado State University in 1968.
Congressman
Anthony C. Beilenson
Anthony C. Beilenson is a former U.S. Congressman from California's
24th Congressional District; he served in the U.S. House of
Representatives from 1977 to 1997 and as Chairman of the House
Permanent Select Committee for Intelligence (HPSCI) from 1989
to 1991. Prior to his election to Congress, Mr. Beilenson served
in the California Assembly from 1963 to 1967 and in the California
State Senate from 1967 to 1977. He is a graduate of Harvard
University and Harvard Law School.
Larry
D. Cox
Mr. Cox is President of the SYGENEX Corporation, a new spin-off
of ORINCON Industries. Since 1997, Mr. Cox was Vice President
and Founder/Director of Special Programs at the ORINCON Corporation,
a leading small-business supplier of advanced technology products
and services to government and commercial customers.
Mr. Cox was recruited into NSA in 1972. He worked in the Directorate
of Operations in the United States and overseas until 1983.
From 1983 to 1991 Mr. Cox was a Chief Scientist and Program
Manager in Space and Ground Systems at the General Electric
Company in Valley Forge, PA.
From 1991 to 1995, Mr. Cox served as a Professional Staff member
of the Subcommittee on Program and Budget Authorization of the
House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI), where
he had oversight responsibility for space, advance technology,
communications and remote-sensing programs.
From 1995 to 1997 Mr. Cox was Division Vice President at the
Sarnoff Labs. As one of the Director's External Team, Mr. Cox
performed an internal audit of NSA in 1999.
Mr. Cox is a sometimes technical advisor to the film industry.
Joan
Avalyn Dempsey
Joan Dempsey was confirmed as Deputy Director of Central Intelligence
for Community Management by the U.S. Senate on May 22, 1998.
This position was established in the 1997 Intelligence Authorization
Act. Previously, Ms. Dempsey served as Chief of Staff for Director
of Central Intelligence George Tenet beginning in July 1997.
Prior to joining the DCI staff, Ms. Dempsey served as Deputy
Assistant Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and Security
and Acting Assistant Secretary of Defense for Command, Control,
Communications and Intelligence. She served, as well, as the
Director of the National Military Intelligence Production Center,
Director of the Military Intelligence Staff, and Deputy Director
of the General Defense Intelligence Program Staff. She entered
federal employment as a Presidential Management Intern in 1983.
Congressman
Norm Dicks
Norm Dicks, a native of Bremerton, Washington, was first elected
to Congress in November 1976 and has been re-elected in every
election since that time. Educated in Bremerton area elementary
and secondary schools, Rep. Dicks graduated from the University
of Washington School of Law in 1968. Later that year, he joined
the staff of Senator Warren G. Magnuson where he served as Legislative
Assistant and later as Administrative Assistant.
During the 1980's, Rep. Dicks was appointed to serve as an official
observer to the US-Soviet arms reduction talks. In 1990, he
was appointed to the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence
(HPSCI). From 1995 through 1998, he served as the ranking Democratic
Member of the HPSCI, and in 1998 was named the Ranking Democrat
on a special Select Committee investigating technology transfer
to China. Rep. Dicks was awarded the CIA Director's Medal upon
completion of his service on the HPSCI in late 1998.
Rep. Dicks currently serves on the board of Visitors of the
U.S. Air Force Academy and on the Congressional Advisory Council
on the Henry M. Jackson Foundation. He is a member of the Washington
State Bar and District of Columbia Bar, and is a member of the
Council on Foreign Relations. In Washington State, he serves
as an honorary member of Rotary and Kiwanis clubs in his district,
and as member of the Puget Sound Naval Bases Association.
Martin
C. Faga
Martin Faga is President and Chief Executive Officer of the
MITRE Corporation and a member of the MITRE Board of Trustees.
He directs the company's activities, primarily the operation
of three Federally Funded Research and Development Centers.
Before joining MITRE, Mr. Faga served from 1989 until 1993 as
Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for Space, where he was
responsible for overall supervision of Air Force space matters
with primary emphasis on policy, strategy and planning. At the
same time, he served as Director of the National Reconnaissance
Office (NRO).
Keith
R. Hall
Keith R. Hall was confirmed by the Senate as Assistant Secretary
of the Air Force (Space) on March 18, 1997, and was appointed
Director of the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) on March
28, 1997. Before joining the NRO, Mr. Hall served as Executive
Director for Intelligence Community Affairs where he was the
principal architect and co-chairman of the Intelligence Program
Review Process. He also co-chaired the Security Policy Forum
and joined the Vice Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff, in directing
the study group that conceptualized the National Imagery and
Mapping Agency. From 1991 to 1995, Mr. Hall served in the Office
of the Secretary of Defense as Deputy Assistant Secretary of
Defense for Intelligence and Security.
Mr. Hall held several professional staff positions with the
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence (SSCI) from 1983 to
1991, including that of Deputy Staff Director. In this capacity,
he was primarily responsible for supporting Committee members
in the annual budget authorization process involving the Intelligence
Community. He also participated in Committee oversight of intelligence
programs and the review of intelligence-related legislation.
Lieutenant
General Patrick M. Hughes, U.S. Army (Retired)
Lieutenant General Hughes is President of PMH Enterprises LLC,
a private consulting firm specializing in intelligence, security
and international relations. He retired from the U.S. Army on
October 1, 1999 after more than 35 years of active duty service.
His last assignment was Director, Defense Intelligence Agency
(DIA), a position he held for 3 years. Other positions of responsibility
included Director of Intelligence (J-2), Joint Staff and DIA;
Director of Intelligence (J-2), U.S. Central Command; and Commanding
General, U.S. Army Intelligence Agency.
His awards and decorations include 3 awards of the Defense Distinguished
Service Medal, the Silver Star, 3 awards of the Bronze Star
for Valor, the Purple Heart, the Combat Infantryman's Badge,
and the Parachute Badge. He is also the recipient of the National
Intelligence Distinguished Service Medal. He is the primary
author of "A Primer on the Future Threat, the Decades Ahead:
1999 - 2020." Lieutenant General Hughes is a graduate of
the School of Advanced Military Studies Two-Year Fellowship
Program.
Mr.
Eli S. Jacobs
Mr. Eli S. Jacobs is a private investor. He has served as a
member of the Defense Policy Board, the General Advisory Committee
on Arms Control and Disarmament, the Chief of Naval Operations
Executive Panel and on the National Reconnaissance Program Task
Force. Mr. Jacobs chaired the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence's
(SSCI) Panel on Counterintelligence Policy. Mr. Jacobs is a
graduate of Yale University and the Yale Law School.
Dr.
William Schneider, Jr.
William Schneider, Jr. is President of International Planning
Services, Inc., a Washington based international trade and finance
advisory firm, and is an Adjunct Fellow of the Hudson Institute.
He was formerly Under Secretary of State for Security Assistance,
Science and Technology (1982 - 1986). Dr. Schneider served as
a Member of the "Rumsfeld Commission" (The Commission
to Assess the Ballistic Missile Threat to the United States)
established by the Congress to review intelligence information
on the current and emerging ballistic missile threat to the
United States. He currently serves as Chairman of the Department
of State's Defense Trade Advisory Group.
Dr. Schneider is the author of several works on defense policy
and has also published numerous articles and monographs on defense
and foreign policy, U.S. strategic forces, theater nuclear forces,
and unconventional warfare. Dr. Schneider received his Ph.D.
degree from New York University in 1968. He is a member of the
American Economic Association, the Econometric Society, and
the International Institute for Strategic Studies.