Attorney Advisor (General)
What you'd do
This position is located in the Drug Enforcement Administrator (DEA), Office of Chief Counsel. This position serves as the principal legal advisor to DEA's Administrator on all administrative, domestic and international criminal, civil, intelligence, regulatory, and asset forfeiture related law issues raised by DEA's worldwide drug enforcement and intelligence efforts. Department of Justice (DOJ) agencies post experienced attorney job announcements on the DOJ Careers page.
Major duties
The Intelligence Law Section is dedicated to supporting all facets of DEA's Office of National Security Intelligence and providing legal support to all agency components on intelligence law. The attorneys coordinate interagency transactions (including memoranda of understanding and agreements, and joint duty assignments), assist in developing procedures and reviewing legislation related to intelligence gathering, sharing, use, disclosure in criminal cases and defensive counterintelligence. Other Duties Include: Provide critical legal counsel on the collection, analysis, and dissemination of drug-related intelligence worldwide. Provide guidance to intelligence personnel on legal aspects of investigations, ensuring compliance with federal laws, regulations, and policies regarding drug trafficking. Advise DEA's Intelligence Division on the legality of intelligence-gathering operations and international law enforcement coordination. Support DEA's Intelligence Division by ensuring that classified and law enforcement sensitive intelligence information, including tactical and strategic data, is handled according to legal standards. Analyze the legal implications of intelligence initiatives, proposed legislation, and agency regulations. Assist in developing information that contributes to major drug organization investigations, seizures, and arrests. Work with special agents and international partners to facilitate the legal sharing of intelligence to disrupt international criminal organizations.
What you need to qualify
All qualification requirements must be met by the closing date of this announcement. All applicants must be an active member of a bar in good standing (any U.S. jurisdiction) and possess: 1) a J.D. degree (or equivalent) and have at least 1-year post-J.D. (or equivalent) criminal, civil, administrative legal or other relevant experience; 2) excellent academic credentials; 3) strong oral and written advocacy skills; 4) superior legal research and analytical skills; 5) a demonstrated ability to function with minimal guidance in a highly demanding environment; 6) ability to provide guidance under tight deadlines and high-pressure situations. Five (5) years of legal experience is preferred. To qualify for GS Level: Applicants applying for the GS-13 must have 2 or more years of post J.D. litigation or other legal experience in criminal narcotics laws, intelligence law, intelligence-gathering operations, international law enforcement investigations, and/or a judicial clerkship. Applicants applying for the GS-14 must have 3 or more years of post J.D. litigation or other legal experience in criminal narcotics laws, intelligence law, intelligence-gathering operations, international law enforcement investigations, and/or a judicial clerkship. Applicants must also have experience working in a collaborative interagency environment and reviewing or editing agency policies, interagency agreements, and/or proposed legislation. Applicants applying for the GS-15 must have 4 or more years of post J.D. litigation or other legal experience in criminal narcotics laws, intelligence law, intelligence-gathering operations, international law enforcement investigations, and/or a judicial clerkship. Applicants must also have experience working in a collaborative interagency environment and reviewing or editing internal agency policies, interagency agreements, or proposed legislation. Applicants must also possess experience working on complex investigative or intelligence initiatives involving sensitive programs, sources and methods and advising senior agency leadership on complex legal or policy matters. Qualifying litigation experience may include civil or criminal litigation with a particular emphasis in criminal narcotics or national security-related litigation preferred. Preferred applicants will also have prior experience in a judicial clerkship and/or criminal or national security litigation position. Applicants must also possess superior research, analytical, and writing abilities.
Before you apply
Federal applications are different: your resume should be 3–5 pages and mirror the language of this announcement. Read our federal resume guide first — it's the #1 reason qualified people get screened out.
Don't miss the next one.
Get an email the moment a similar federal job opens — postings can close in as little as 5 days.