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Paul Goldenberg

Paul Goldenberg started his career as a beat patrolman in urban New Jersey. He is a former decorated undercover agent and senior ranking law enforcement leader with nearly three decades of experience, including leading organized crime investigations and serving 10 years as a senior advisor to the Secretary of Homeland Security. He has chaired Congressional DHS subcommittees on foreign fighters, cybersecurity and targeted violence, and has worked globally with police agencies across Europe, Scandinavia, the UK and the Middle East. He is CEO of Cardinal Point Strategies, Chief Policy Advisor to the Rutgers University Miller Center on Policing, Distinguished Visiting Fellow at the University of Ottawa’s for Transnational Security, a senior officer with the Global Consortium of Law Enforcement Training Executives, member of the NSA Border Council and Chair of Public Safety BOA for Draganfly.

LATEST ARTICLES
During Belfast’s recent anti-immigration unrest, the Police Service of Northern Ireland demonstrated how dialogue policing can help agencies control volatility
As hostile drone threats become more sophisticated, law enforcement agencies face growing gaps in training, detection capabilities and operational preparedness
Today’s attackers are increasingly radicalized not through formal extremist groups, but through immersive online environments that normalize violence
As demonstrations increasingly unfold outside synagogues, mosques and churches, the distinction between protest and intimidation is becoming harder to ignore
From drone threats to packed transit hubs, law enforcement is managing a continuous, cross-border security challenge unlike anything seen before
Two decades after 9/11 reshaped intelligence sharing, evolving threats and fading collaboration are exposing gaps that law enforcement must urgently rebuild
Foreign conflicts, local consequences — six priorities for law enforcement leaders as global tensions rise
As instructors face criminal prosecution, police leaders must confront how to preserve rigorous training while strengthening safety protocols and accountability
As political rhetoric and fractured coordination reshape enforcement, police chiefs and sheriffs face rising risks to officer safety, legal exposure and institutional trust
As threats escalate on open campuses, law enforcement leaders are expected to prevent tragedy without the authority, intelligence or institutional support required to succeed