Marc came to Indevtech as Risk Specialist and AI Practice Lead in 2026 — though "came to" undersells it. He and Scott met in 2007, when Marc was a Navy JAG attorney stationed at Pearl Harbor. The arrangement that emerged nineteen years later was the natural shape of a friendship that had been forming for most of that time.
His career has run on two tracks. The first is the law: as a Navy JAG attorney he prosecuted on behalf of the United States and also worked the defense side, handling complex matters in high-stakes operational environments, including deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan. His civilian practice since has been in civil law. Along the way he has taught continuing legal education to attorneys and judges, which is to say: to the people who already know what the rules are, learning to think about them more carefully. The second track is aviation: he trained from zero flight time to Airline Transport Pilot, the highest certification a civilian pilot can hold. Two professions, one underlying discipline: read the situation, weigh the variables, do not improvise.
At Indevtech he leads the AI practice. The work falls into three rough buckets: helping partner firms establish reasonable guardrails for AI use inside the firm, advising on the regulatory and risk dimensions of new technology adoption, and translating compliance frameworks into things that can actually be implemented by a working business. The throughline is preparation. Where most AI conversations right now run on enthusiasm or fear, Marc's run on reading the rules carefully first.
He is currently spending time in West Virginia caring for his parents. Hawaii has been home for the better part of two decades, and the West Virginia stay is a temporary arrangement, not a relocation. He brings probably the most formal credentialing on the team — J.D., Navy JAG, ATP pilot. None of these are things he mentions unprompted.