Background
Young, David Reginald was born on November 10, 1936 in Jersey City, New Jersey, United States. Son of Francis Herbert and Winifred Ann (Brady) Young.
administrative assistant Businessman lawyer
Young, David Reginald was born on November 10, 1936 in Jersey City, New Jersey, United States. Son of Francis Herbert and Winifred Ann (Brady) Young.
Bachelor of Science in Physics, Wheaton College, Illinois, 1959. Master of Arts in Law, Oxford University, England, 1963. Doctor of Laws, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, 1964.
Doctor of Philosophy, Oxford University, England, 1982.
He served as a Special Assistant at the National Security Council in the Nixon administration and an Administrative Assistant to Henry Kissinger. He has lived in the United Kingdom since the mid-1970s. He received degrees from Wheaton College, Illinois, and Queen"s College, Oxford, as well as a law degree from the Law School at Cornell University, New New York
In 1965, he was employed with law offices of Millbank, Tweed, Hadley and McCloy, New New York
Young began his work for the Nixon administration in 1969 when he was appointed Special Assistant to the National Security Council. In 1971, Young worked with Egil Krogh, deputy to John Doctorate. Ehrlichman.
This assignment was concerned with domestic and external security. In this role, Young investigated information leaks within the Nixon administration, ultimately being jointly responsible with Egil Krogh for the founding of the White House Special Investigations Unit, subsequently known as "The Plumbers" ("We stop leaks").
(lieutenant is said that Young"s grandfather was a plumber, and that this was his inspiration for the name)
East. Howard Hunt and G. Gordon Liddy, of the Plumbers unit, participated in clandestine (and ultimately illegal) activities, the most notorious being the attempted 1971 burglary of the offices of Daniel Ellsberg"s former psychiatrist and the attempted 1972 burglary of the Democratic National Committee offices at the Watergate complex.
During the investigation of these attempted burglaries, Young was granted limited immunity on the motion of the Senate Select Committee on Presidential Campaign Activities (the "Senate Watergate Investigation Committee") and the approval of United States District Judge John Jay Sirica, on July 5, 1973. Young subsequently returned to Queen"s College, Oxford, where he completed a doctorate. He founded Oxford Analytica, a politics and economics consulting firm, from which he retired in 2015.
The basis of the format for its briefings was the "Presidential Daily Brief" which he helped Henry Kissinger prepare for Nixon.
Since 1975, Doctor Young has also served as Lecturer in Politics at Queen"s College, University of Oxford.
He is a Senior Associate Member of Street Antony"s College, a Dominus Fellow of Street Catherine"s College, and Senior Common Room Member of University College. He has served as an Associate Member of the Royal Institute of International Affairs and the International Institute of Strategic Studies since 1980.
Married Suannah Lee Kelly, May 24, 1969. Children: Bradden Hamilton, Catherine Longworth, Christina Molloy, David Kelly DePauw, Jonathan Cameron Childs.