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UC Alum to Speak at MBA Residency
Weber Recently Took Position with SEC
Written By Chrisitne Leogrande
Weber's keynote to highlight MBA residency
Contact - cleogrande@utica.edu
Utica, NY (01/13/2012) - David P. Weber, a 1995 graduate of Utica College, has been named Assistant Inspector General for Investigations at the Office of Inspector General (OIG) of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). In this role, Weber directs all criminal, civil, and administrative investigations into fraud, waste, or abuse concerning SEC programs and operations and supervises the office’s investigative staff.Weber will return to UC on Monday (Jan. 16) to address students at the MBA in Fraud Management residency. He will speak at 9:30 in the Carbone Family Auditorium in the college’s Economic Crime, Justice Studies and Cybersecurity building.
Prior to his employment at the SEC OIG, Weber served as Supervisory Counsel and Chief of Enforcement Unit I for the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and was responsible for overseeing all banking enforcement activities and investigations involving state chartered banks and bank failures for the western half of the United States. Before joining the FDIC, Weber served for more than a decade as the Special Counsel for Enforcement at the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the bureau of the United States Department of the Treasury which is responsible for the supervision and regulation of the national banking system.
Weber also previously served as the law clerk to a United States District Judge in New York and, in that capacity, assisted with criminal and civil cases before the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. He is admitted to practice law in the District of Columbia and New York and before several United States district courts and the United States Supreme Court. He earned a bachelor’s degree cum laude in criminal justice from Utica College and holds a Juris Doctor degree magna cum laude from the Syracuse University College of Law. Weber is a certified fraud examiner and a member of the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners.
In addition to his federal career, Weber is an adjunct associate professor at the University of Maryland University College (UMUC), where he teaches two courses per semester in fraud and forensic investigation. Weber serves as a core faculty member of UMUC’s fraud and forensic investigations certificate program.
Sixty students are expected to attend the three-day residency, which is one of the few programs in the nation combining fraud management with business. For more information about the MBA in Fraud Management, visit www.onlineuticacollege.com.