Dr. Kingman Wong
Dr. Kingman Wong retired as an FBI Special Agent after nearly 25 years of service. During his FBI tenure, he held investigative, supervisory, management, and senior executive positions, to include working undercover domestically and overseas against Chinese secret society, aka triad, members; Head of the Asian Organized Crime Squad in San Francisco; Chief of the Asian Criminal Enterprise Unit at FBI Headquarters leading the National Asian Organized Crime Program; Assistant Special Agent in Charge of the Criminal Program in FBI San Diego leading the investigation of drug cartels, organized crime, violent crime, and major offenders; Chief of the International Operations Section, Office of International Operations at FBI Headquarters, overseeing the FBI’s 75 foreign offices and sub-offices around the world; and Special Agent in Charge of the Special Operations and Cyber Division, FBI New York office, where he created the FBI’s first Cyber Branch to focus on cyber-related national security, criminal, and computer forensic matters. Dr. Wong was also selected by the FBI director to serve two overseas assignments, first as Chief the FBI Hong Kong office to collaborate and coordinate FBI activities with the governments of Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan, and then as Chief of the FBI Ottawa office to work closely on national security and criminal matters with the Canadian government, a Five Eyes intelligence partner. Upon his retirement from the FBI, he was recruited by Las Vegas Sands to serve as the Vice President and Chief Compliance Officer for Sands China Limited in Macau and Hong Kong and Marina Bay Sands in Singapore, both being the key subsidiaries of Las Vegas Sands. While at Sands, he built and led a highly successful compliance program and mitigated money laundering, terrorist financing, bribery, and corruption risks faced by the company. During this same time, he was repeatedly invited by the U.S. government to train regulators and investigators from 12 countries on Asian organized crime, money laundering, and casino crime investigation. Following his corporate stint in Asia, he returned to the U.S. as an adjunct professor of Cybersecurity at the George Washington University. During this time, he also worked to support the investigation of domestic and international money laundering syndicates at the Money Laundering and Asset Forfeiture Section, U.S. Department of Justice. Later, he was recruited by Google to join as the company’s Law Enforcement Compliance Lead. Mr. Wong holds a PhD in Public Policy and Administration - Homeland Security; a Master of Science in Cybersecurity; a Master in Public Administration; a Bachelor of Arts in Criminal Justice; and professional certifications as a Certified Anti-Money Laundering Specialist, a Certified Fraud Examiner, and a Certified Protection Professional. He was the recipient of numerous law enforcement awards, such as a U.S. Attorney General Award, a FBI Director’s Award, a New York State Senate proclamation, a New York Federal Executive Board Award, and a California State Assembly proclamation.