Matthew Glen Olsen, a Hart InterCivic board member since August, 2018, takes office as Assistant Attorney General, National Security Division.

Hart InterCivic is a large electronic election systems vendor. Olsen was a Hart InterCivic board member during the 2020 elections.

His resume sent to the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence says that Olsen was Director of the National Counterterrorism Center from September, 2011-September, 2014, and was general counsel of the National Security Agency from July, 2010-August, 2011.

Form March to July, 2010, Olsen was Associate Deputy Attorney General.

He has a long career at the Department of Justice, where he served for a period as special counsel to the FBI Director, the National Security Agency, and the private sector.

Source:
1. https://www.intelligence.senate.gov/q-molsen-072021.pdf

1. Olsen had a strong Inside the Beltway career as a lawyer for the FBI, Department of Justice, and the NSA before joining the Hart InterCivic board, and an association with liberal political organizations and causes. What value would he bring to Hart InterCivic?

2. With his national security background, would Olsen have been in a position to safeguard the company from foreign manipulation or interference?

3. As associate deputy attorney general from March-July, 2010, did Olsen have any role in the Justice Department’s decision to compel ES&S to sell its Premier division to Dominion?

4. Did Olsen’s appointment to the board of Hart InterCivic have anything to do with anticipation of the 2020 elections?

5. What role did Olsen play with Hart InterCivic with regard to the company’s role in the voting and tabulation of the 2020 elections?