Our Board

Danielle Brian
Board Member
Danielle Brian is the Executive Director and President of the Project On Government Oversight (POGO), a non-profit, independent watchdog that has pioneered investigates and exposes waste, corruption, and abuse of power.

Linda Miller
President, Co-Founder, Board Chair
Linda is a national authority on integrity and fraud prevention, having worked in both public and private sectors. She is the CEO of Audient Group, and served in leadership roles at the Pandemic Response Accountability Committee and the Government Accountability Office.

Andrew Moylan
Board Member
Andrew Moylan is Vice President of Public Finance at Arnold Ventures, where he leads work to advance smarter, evidence-based tax, budget, and integrity policies.

Gavin Ugale
Executive Director, Co-Founder, Board Member
Gavin has 20 years of experience working in and with governments to promote integrity, accountability, and transparency, including leadership roles with the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and the Government Accountability Office.
Linda Miller
Chair of the Board | Co-Founder
Linda Miller is a national authority on fraud prevention and detection, with over 16 years of experience in both public and private sectors. Currently, Linda is the CEO of Audient Group, a consultancy that delivers cutting-edge antifraud solutions to commercial and government clients. Linda served as the Deputy Executive Director of the Pandemic Response Accountability Committee and led the Government Accountability Office’s development of the Fraud Risk Management Framework.
Linda’s influential work extends to the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO) Fraud Risk Management Guide and contributing to the Fraud Reduction and Data Analytics Act. A sought-after speaker and media commentator, she has testified before Congress and been featured in outlets like NBC News and Business Insider.
Danielle Brian
Board Member
Danielle Brian is the Executive Director and President of the Project On Government Oversight (POGO). Under her leadership, the organization has grown from two employees and a budget in the thousands of dollars in 1993 to an organization with a staff of fifty and a budget of eight million. Danielle has testified before Congress over 40 times.
POGO’s investigative work under her stewardship has received journalism awards such as the Sigma Delta Chi award, the Robert D.G. Lewis Watchdog Award, the Dateline Award, and the Reed Award for Best Civic Engagement Education Resource, as well as awards from the Society for Advancing Business Editing and Writing, the Association for Business Journalists, and others.
POGO has received the highest reviews for organizational and financial performance from the three largest charity evaluators in the country: Charity Navigator, Better Business Bureau, and GreatNonprofits.org.
Danielle has been named by Washingtonian magazine as one of the most influential people shaping good government policy; has been recognized by the National Journal as one of the top 50 people changing the game in Washington, receiving top rankings for her impact and innovation in the field of political activism; and was inducted into the Freedom of Information Act Hall of Fame.
In 2010, she was awarded the Smith College Medal, an award for alumnae who exemplify the true purpose of a liberal arts education. Danielle received her bachelor’s degree in government from Smith College, and her master’s degree in international relations from the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies.
Andrew Moylan
Board Member
Andrew works to advance smarter, evidence-based tax and budget policies that will promote fiscal stability for governments and financial independence and security for Americans.
Prior to joining Arnold Ventures, Andrew was Executive Vice President of the National Taxpayers Union Foundation, a nonpartisan research and educational organization that shows Americans how taxes, government spending, and regulations affect them. In addition to management and development duties, he led NTUF’s research agenda and spearheaded the launch of several new programs, including a strategic litigation team and a research initiative focusing on limits to state power in the internet age. Previously, Andrew was Executive Director of the R Street Institute, where he oversaw all research, outreach, and communications efforts for a rapidly growing think tank. Before helping establish R Street, Andrew was Vice President of Government Affairs for the National Taxpayers Union.
Andrew’s insights and commentary have appeared frequently in national outlets like the Wall Street Journal and New York Times, in tax publications like Law360 and TaxNotes, and in Capitol Hill-focused media like Politico and The Hill. He has also provided expert testimony on tax and budget issues to Congress and state legislatures. Andrew is a graduate of the University of Michigan and lives in Arlington, VA with his wife, four children, one dog, and zero moments of total silence.
Gavin Ugale
Executive Director | Co-Founder
Gavin has 20 years of experience working in the U.S. and globally to strengthen the impact of public spending through integrity and accountability initiatives. At the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) in Paris for nearly a decade, he pioneered the work to modernize integrity and anti-corruption efforts through the innovative use of technology and data in collaboration with governments in Europe and Latin America. He helped shape global standards like the OECD’s Recommendation on Public Integrity and benchmarks like the Public Integrity Indicators. Prior to his time at the OECD, Gavin served at the Government Accountability Office (GAO) in Washington, D.C. He was the primary author of GAO’s Framework for Managing Fraud Risks in Federal Programs, which was written into law as part of the Fraud Reduction and Data Analytics Act.
Early in his career, Gavin served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Ukraine, where he co-founded a civic engagement nonprofit and launched a national initiative to “bridge the digital divide” for underserved youth. He began his journey in program integrity over 20 years ago, working on the frontlines of a nonprofit in Oregon to distribute federal, state, and local grants that supported low-income communities.