Luke McCormack

Luke J. McCormack was the chief information officer of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security from December 16, 2013, to May 2, 2017.[1]

Luke McCormack
Born
Luke J. McCormack
Nationality United States of America
Alma materUniversity of Maryland
OccupationChief Information Officer

Early life and education

McCormack is a native of Long Island, N.Y., and resides in Virginia. He has two sons. He holds an MBA from the University of Maryland's Smith School and certifications from Columbia University and the National Defense University.[2]

Career

Before joining the federal government, he worked for various private sector companies including MCI and Ford Aerospace.[1]

From 1999 to 2005, he worked in several capacities at Customs and Border Protection. From 2005 to 2012, he worked as CIO for the Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

He began at the Department of Justice as Deputy Assistant Attorney General for Information Resources Management/Chief Information Officer.[1]

He is currently on the board of advisors for TRI-COR Industries, an IT services firm.

gollark: If they want art because it looks nice or they need to advertise something, say, then they'll care less about it being "real art" by humans.
gollark: If people care about art as a status signal or art for some philosophical reason they might want it to be human-made.
gollark: It does seem plausible that AI art might kill off much of commissioned art/graphic design.
gollark: We can assume that the AI runs faster than humans because people will only run training for a few months at most before they get bored and stop.
gollark: Legal action was maybe also bad.

References

  1. Luke J. McCormack, DHS website. Retrieved June 6, 2017]
    - ExecutiveGov.com, retrieved June 6, 2017
  2. "Luke J. McCormack to serve as the DHS CIO", Government Technology and Services Coalition website. Retrieved June 6, 2017.
Government offices
Preceded by
Richard Spires
Chief Information Officer Department of Homeland Security
December 2013 – May 2017
Succeeded by
Richard Staropoli


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