Breaking: The Arkin Group Launches TAG Intel, Unlocking CIA-Level Geopolitical Intelligence for Wealth Management

National Press Club "Newsmakers" Event

Jack Devine was a panelist at the National Press Club’s “Newsmakers” event on August 20, 2009, where he discussed the privatization of intelligence and the future of the CIA. The panel also included former Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff and former CIA Director Michael Hayden, and was moderated by author Joseph Finder.

Water Issues in Latin America

TAG partnered with the Latin Economic Forum to produce Tapped Out, an examination of water issues in Latin America and the Caribbean. The paper draws attention to an under-appreciated challenge that could have major strategic consequences for the future health and sustainable growth of the Western Hemisphere.

10th Annual CEO2CEO Leadership Summit

Jack Devine was a panelist at the 10th Annual CEO2CEO Leadership Summit on November 11, 2008, sponsored by Chief Executive Magazine. The panel discussed “The World the Next President Inherits.”

Business Crime Bulletin

Stanley S. Arkin, Peter B. Pope, and Barrett N. Prinz discussed the new “Department of Justice Guidelines on Prosecuting Businesses,” in the Business Crime Bulletin, Vol. 16, No.2. (October 2008)

World Policy Journal Article

Jack Devine discussed the future of intelligence and the intelligence industry in “Tomorrow’s Spygames,” published in the World Policy Journal. (Fall 2008)

New York Law Journal Article

Stanley S. Arkin and Sean R. O’Brien, provide advice on the “Effective Use of Private Investigators by Attorneys,” New York Law Journal, Vol. 238. (December 26, 2007).

The History Channel Documentary

Jack Devine appeared in The True Story of Charlie Wilson’s War, a History Channel documentary that explored the CIA’s efforts to fend off the Soviet Union in Afghanistan. (original air-date: December 22, 2007)

Washington Post Interview

Vernon Loeb interviewed Jack Devine about the United States’ role in the 1973 Chilean coup for “Spook Story,” Washington Post (September 17, 2000).