A versatile global security leader and executive with a 16-year career that includes broad experience spanning physical, cyber, digital asset protection, loss prevention, supply chain security, investigations, security assessments and compliance, and event security. Equally adept at finding right-sized physical, digital, environmental, and personnel security controls to minimize risk and amplify profits.
Promoted to oversee Hasbro’s global security compliance programs with a $4.5M annual budget, seven direct reports, and a 20-member organization spanning four countries. Responsible for data and IP protection to include digital assets (images, CAD/design sculpts, etc.) and how they are generated, stored, shared, and used within manufacturing at Hasbro and third-party facilities.
Recruited into a tailored role to execute on plans developed during a 12-week consulting project to design a security program to protect IP and trade secrets during toy manufacturing at overseas third-party facilities.
Managed multiple projects in the Public Sector Cybsersecurity practice for government entities. Supported the Hasbro project for global evaluation of IP Security practices.
Provided 24/7 IT services for three Justices and staff.
Nicholas Matlach, Who Let the Katz Out? How the ECPA and SCA Fail to Apply to Modern Digital Communications and How Returning to the Principles in Katz v. United States Will Fix It, 18 CommLaw Conspectus 421 (2010). Available at: https://scholarship.law.edu/commlaw/vol18/iss2/6
Hasbro, Inc.
The Supreme Court of the United States