Last Updated: Sept. 15, 2015
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In 1971, Montgomery reportedly graduated from Grossmont College near San Diego with a two-year associate’s degree in medical technology. See Aram Roston, "The Man Who Conned the Pentagon," Playboy, Jan/Feb 2010 (Lexis-Nexis version of this article as filed in Montgomery v. Risen, ECF 52-3); see also eTreppid State Proceedings ECF 644-21 at 113 (testifying that he received “an associate of science in cardiopulmonary technology, and [] did not complete a bachelor’s degree in biology”)
From about 1973 to 1975 Montgomery “went to work in a hospital for two years as a perfusionist . . . I'll restate that. I went to work as a cardiopulmonary technician,” per his Feb. 7, 2006 testimony. eTreppid State Proceedings ECF 644-21 at 113.
From 1975 to around 1980, Montgomery "worked as a consultant on medical equipment and medicine, according to his Feb. 7, 2006 testimony. eTreppid State Proceedings ECF 644-21 at 113. More specifically, he was “developing a series of programs that would allow an automated method for calculating blood gas and several other parameters.” Id. At that time, he had no background in computer programming; he was “just learning it as [he] was going along.” Id. at 113-14.
Per Montgomery's Oct. 30, 2006 Declaration, he has been “a computer programmer since approximately 1978 developing software programs and the source codes for the programs in thousands of different and varied applications, but mostly involving thousands of different programs for ‘data compression,’ pattern recognition; anomaly detection and an ‘Object Detection System.’” Montgomery v eTreppid ECF 228 ¶ 2.
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