Shifted out of the NOAA law enforcement director's chair in 2010 after an inspector general found his agents had improperly treated fishermen like criminals and abused a multi-million dollar fund built on fines, Dale J. Jones Jr.'s career has rebounded.
Less than two years after revelations of a mass document shredding authorized by Jones that may have destroyed evidence sought by investigators for Commerce Department Inspector General Todd Zinser, Jones has been named a program manager for a high-priority initiative aimed at opening data portals for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the outside world.
After he was quietly removed as director of law enforcement in April 2010 — with no reference to Jones, the email press release said only that an interim acting chief had been appointed — Jones was reassigned to be a fisheries analyst.
He absorbed a negligible reduction in pay, from $158,500 as director of law enforcement to $155,000 as a fisheries analyst.
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