Partnership for Public Service


Taryn Guariglia, an unassuming but relentless Internal Revenue Service (IRS) special agent, led the complex investigation that resulted in the indictment, guilty plea and 50-year prison sentence of South Florida lawyer Scott Rothstein, the flamboyant mastermind of a Ponzi scheme that fleeced investors of an estimated $1.2 billion.

Within days after Rothstein fled to Morocco on a private jet in 2009 , just as his massive swindle was unraveling, Guariglia worked closely with prosecutors and a team of IRS and FBI agents to quickly amass the necessary evidence to charge Rothstein with racketeering, money laundering, and mail and wire fraud. Keep reading →

Federal agencies looking to attract the next generation of technically-inclined leaders have their work cut out for them, but may also have a window of opportunity, according to new analysis of college students’ plans released this week by the Partnership for Public Service.

Based on a survey of 35,401 students from 599 colleges and universities across the nation, the Partnership found that just 6% of students intend to work in federal, state or local government–and the percentage was even lower among students majoring in technical areas. Keep reading →

Measuring leadership — and identifying federal agencies that breed effective leaders–has rarely been a simple undertaking. Keep reading →


Becoming a whistleblower is often a risky and difficult path for federal employees, and so is finding the truth and protecting those who have exposed wrongdoing from being fired, punished or harassed.

Dan Meyer, director of civilian reprisal investigations with the Office of the Inspector General at the Department of Defense (DOD), took the job of protecting whistleblowers to new and often perilous territory — the Pentagon’s intelligence and counterintelligence communities and the murky world of top secret or “black” programs. Keep reading →


In December 2010, the U.S. Senate ratified a new Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (New START) with Russia, a significant breakthrough that requires a scaling back of Cold War-era nuclear arsenals and the resumption of mutual inspections that lapsed in 2009.

Working behind-the-scenes on this important arms control treaty was Paul Dean, a State Department lawyer who is credited as one of the legal architects of the accord. During a two-year period, Dean participated in the bilateral negotiations, helped draft the treaty, wrote a 200-page legal analysis, provided legal counsel and solutions to vexing issues during the Senate ratification debate, and then worked to ensure final Russian approval.

“You have negotiators that discuss the concepts, but you then need someone to frame it into a binding legal document-that’s what Paul did,” said Harold Hongju Koh, the State Department legal advisor.

He was the lawyer best suited to work the delicate national security and political issues, resolve those issues and to help ensure the treaty would be ratified,” said Highsmith. “He is what service to America is all about.” – Newell Highsmith

Newell Highsmith, an assistant legal adviser at the State Department, said Dean had “great mastery and confidence of the subject matter,” and worked closely with various U.S. agencies, including the intelligence and defense communities. He said Dean also developed a rapport with his Russian counterparts, solved problems for policy negotiators and later gained the confidence of members of the Senate during the politically-charged ratification debate.

“He has a willingness to take ownership and make himself the go-to person, the person everyone goes to for advice,” said Highsmith. “Paul had the right creativity to do that and not undermine principals, while working on complex and politically touchy issues.”

Dean spent six months in Geneva taking part in the negotiations with the Russians, serving as one of two legal counsels to the large U.S. inter-agency team. His duties included providing advice on the legal ramifications of various proposals and options, and ensuring that language in the English and Russian versions of the treaty carried the same legal meaning.

After negotiations were completed, Dean worked to complete a transmittal package for the U.S. Senate, finding creative ways to address senatorial concerns while protecting presidential prerogatives. Through the summer of 2010, he worked on answers to nearly 1,000 written questions from senators, prepared administration witnesses for hearings and negotiated with key senators and staff to find solutions to several last-minute challenges.

“Many of the proposals from senators raised legal and policy questions, requiring Paul to devise clever on-the-spot solutions that were acceptable to parties with vastly different interests,” said Koh.

Dean said getting the treaty through the Senate was, at times, “pretty confrontational,” and he saw his role as stepping in with legal advice and ideas to “moderate the process.”

“There was a vigorous debate about the substance of the treaty, in particular, the treaty’s impact on U.S. missile defenses. I walked Senate staff through the treaty’s detailed provisions to help assuage their concerns,” said Dean.

After the 71-26 ratification vote, Dean worked closely with his Russian counterparts to help ensure approval by the Russian legislature. Again, he worked to alleviate Russian concerns, answering questions about the tough debate on Capitol Hill and some amendments that were made to the Senate’s Resolution of Advice and Consent. He engaged in a series of direct talks with the Russian legal adviser, helping persuade officials in Moscow to take important U.S. concerns into account and showing that the essential obligations of the treaty had not changed.

Dean began his legal career at a prestigious Washington corporate law firm just days after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, an event he said inspired in him a sense of obligation to devote his energy and talents to a greater purpose.

“I have a clear memory of talking with friends about foreign policy issues and thinking, ‘we should be a part of that,'” said Dean, who began working at the State Department in 2003.

Highsmith said Dean has proven himself to be a creative thinker, and someone who could “see problems before they arise.”

“He was the lawyer best suited to work the delicate national security and political issues, resolve those issues and to help ensure the treaty would be ratified,” said Highsmith. “He is what service to America is all about.”

Paul Dean was a 2011 Service to America Medal finalist for the National Security and Internatioal Affairs category. This award recognizes a federal employee for a significant contribution to the nation in activities related to national security and international affairs (including defense, military affairs, diplomacy, foreign assistance and trade). This medal is accompanied by a $3,000 monetary award.

Photo credit: Sam Kittner

In March 2010, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC)unveiled a National Broadband Plan setting the country’s telecommunications and technology priorities for the next decade, and establishing high-speed Internet as America’s leading communications network.

The FCC’s ambitious blueprint proposed “connecting all corners of the nation” with a robust and affordable broadband communications system that will transform the economy and American society, changing the way we educate children, deliver health care, manage energy, ensure public safety, engage government and compete in the global marketplace. Keep reading →


On Jan. 31, 2000, Alaska Airlines Flight 261 plunged 18,000 feet into the Pacific Ocean, killing all 88 people on board. This was also Sharon Bryson’s first day as head of a National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) program that assists survivors and family members of those killed in transportation disasters.

Bryson quickly grabbed her “go-bag” and headed to the West Coast to support the distraught families of the victims, a crucial but heart-wrenching task that she has undertaken more than 140 times. Keep reading →


This is one in a series of articles highlighting Breaking Gov’s best stories of the past year. As we reflected on our 2011 coverage of innovation, technology and management amongst the federal agencies and workforce, this was among the stories that stood out as delivering key insight into the top issues facing today’s government community.

While many government leaders might give lip service to the merits of creativity and innovation in the public sector, few actually put the idea into practice, according to the Partnership for Public Service‘s research into the best places to work in government Keep reading →


This is one in a series of articles highlighting Breaking Gov’s best stories of the past year. As we reflected on our 2011 coverage of innovation, technology and management amongst the federal agencies and workforce, this was among the stories that stood out as delivering key insight into the top issues facing today’s government community.

Thirty four public servants were honored for their distinguished service, including nine individuals who were awarded Samuel J. Heyman Service to America Medals for their high-impact contributions to the health, safety and well-being of Americans at a Washington, D.C. gala Sept. 15. Keep reading →


While an original rough draft of the Declaration of Independence is filled with strike-outs and corrections made by Thomas Jefferson, one word that he tried to expunge sparked the interest of Fenella France, a preservation scientist at the Library of Congress.

Using a sophisticated and safe imaging technique that she helped develop, France confirmed that Jefferson originally described the American public in the Declaration of Independence as “subjects” before replacing it with the word “citizens.” Keep reading →

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