
Andrew Macpherson, Director,
Technical Analysis Group
Mr. Macpherson is a Research Assistant Professor of Justice Studies in the University of New Hampshire, Justiceworks program and serves as the director of the Technical Analysis Group. TAG is currently supporting the New Hampshire Attorney General's office and state law enforcement partners as they increase the state's capabilities to respond to cyber crimes. Mr. Macpherson also advises the Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force Training and Technical Assistance Program on strategic planning. Mr. Macpherson has served as an advisor to the Department of Homeland Security National Cyber Security Division on state and local law enforcement matters. Prior to his appointment at the University of New Hampshire Mr. Macpherson served at Dartmouth College's Institute for Security Technology Studies. In his role as Technical Program Coordinator he received funding from the Department of Homeland Security Office for Domestic Preparedness and National Institute of Justice for research efforts including the studies titled Examining the Cyber Capabilities of Islamic Terrorist Groups and Law Enforcement Tools and Technologies for Investigating Cyber Attacks: A National Research and Development Agenda. Prior to his work at Dartmouth Mr. Macpherson served at the United Nations Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia and Cognos Inc. He is a graduate of the London School of Economics where he received his M.A. in the History of International Relations. Mr. Macpherson earned his undergraduate degree, cum laude, at Mercyhurst College in the Research Intelligence Analysts Program. Mr. Macpherson was named one of the top 40 under 40 in New Hampshire for 2007 by the Union Leader newspaper. The award honors 40 individuals, under the age of 40, who are making a difference in the state.

Kevin O'Shea, Project Director, Technical
Analysis Group
Kevin O’Shea is currently employed as a Project
Director for the Technical Analysis Group in the Justiceworks
program at the University of New Hampshire. In this
capacity Mr. O’Shea supports the implementation
of the New Hampshire Strategic Plan to Combat Cyber
Crime.
Prior to working with the University of New Hampshire, Mr. O’Shea was a Research
Associate for Project Management within the Technical
Analysis Group in the Institute
for Security Technology Studies at Dartmouth College.
He was a member of the research team and substantive
author of three critical national reports
to document and present the most pressing impediments
facing the law-enforcement community when investigating
and responding
to cyber attacks.
Mr. O’Shea is a certified GSEC and has lectured
on information security, law enforcement technology,
cyber terrorism and online research methodology to
numerous organizations including the Silicon
Valley HTCIA and the Board of Directors of
The International
Association of Fire Chiefs (IAFC). Most
recently, Mr. O’Shea provided content
and instruction on open source intelligence research
methodology and terrorist use of technologies based
on the TAG Examining the Cyber Capabilities of
Islamic Terrorist Groups report at the Federal
Law Enforcement Training Center’s pilot Counter Cyber Terrorism
Investigator Training course. Mr O’Shea recently
contributed to the Office for Domestic Preparedness
sponsored study assessing the interoperability of available
Crisis
Information Management Software (CIMS) and data
fusion solutions.
Stacy Kollias, Project Director, Technical Analysis
Group
Stacy Kollias served in the United States Army for more than twenty
years, during which she gained extensive experience with the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO),
the National Security Agency (NSA), and various
Special Operations Programs. She has directed, planned and executed multidiscipline
counterintelligence operations with national level agencies, host nation national elements, service
cryptologic elements, and installations, including classified contingency operations and operations
Just Cause and Desert Storm. Ms. Kollias has participated in several “red-team”
efforts assessing physical, transmission, cryptographic and computer security, and provided counterintelligence
support to NATO operations in the Former Republic of Yugoslavia as well as during the Kosovo crisis.
Ms. Kollias has most recently been involved in projects
focusing on National Security and tools and technologies
to assist the law enforcement community in the investigation
of cyber crime.
Specifically:- Served as a subject-matter expert on the
Department of Homeland Security’s behalf evaluating applications to the 2004 Homeland
Security Information Technology Evaluation Program. This Joint Program
between the Office of the Chief
Information Officer and the Office
for Domestic Preparedness was intended to foster and evaluate novel
uses of existing, “state-of-the-market” information technology
demonstrate how to remove barriers and improve information sharing and integration.
- Researched, developed, and tested
a prototype national contact database for cyber attack investigators.
This restricted-access national database prototype of law enforcement contacts,
searchable by geographic location, position, and technological expertise
was available to investigators through partnerships with law enforcement organizations
and information sharing entities. Research in this area focused on schema design,
leveraging existing data, and national coordination and information sharing. Plans are
underway to provide this prototype at no charge to the law enforcement community.
- Participated in a National study assessing the interoperability of
available Crisis
Information Management Software (CIMS) and data fusion solutions.
This report delivered a consensus-driven framework for the development
and implementationof standards required by emergency
management agencies in this domain.
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