Stephen Moran Bio

Steve serves as senior vice president, general counsel and corporate secretary, and chief compliance officer on CalAmp’s Leadership Team. He reports directly to President & CEO, Michael Burdiek, and is responsible for overseeing all of CalAmp’s worldwide legal affairs including strategic technology agreements, M&A, intellectual property, securities regulation, compliance, litigation, and corporate governance and secretarial functions. In 2013, he joined CalAmp as vice president of legal affairs, was elevated to vice president and general counsel in 2015, promoted to senior vice president and general counsel in 2016, and appointed corporate secretary and chief compliance officer in 2017.

Over the past 24 years (19 years in Orange County), Steve has been entrusted to serve as the general counsel for Globus Medical, Inc. (NYSE: GMED), executive vice president, general counsel & secretary, and executive vice president of human capital for Masimo Corporation (Nasdaq: MASI); vice president, general counsel & secretary, and vice president of human resources & administration for Toshiba America Business Solutions, Inc.; vice president, general counsel & secretary, and vice president of human resources for Intersil Corporation (Nasdaq: ISIL); and vice president and general counsel for Toshiba America Electronic Components, Inc. Steve began his inhouse legal career with ITT Corporation (NYSE: ITT), where he served in increasingly responsible positions before being appointed general counsel of ITT Cannon. Steve has extensive experience in corporate governance, M&A, IPOs, technology agreements, compliance, litigation, securities regulation, intellectual property, competition, environmental, and law department management.

Steve earned his bachelor’s degree, cum laude, from Claremont McKenna College and his juris doctor degree from Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, where he was on the staff of the Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review. He is admitted to practice law in California, Colorado, and the District of Columbia and is admitted to the U.S. Supreme Court. He served as an intelligence officer, first on active duty as a captain in the U.S. Army, and then as a lieutenant in the U.S. Naval Reserve. He was an adjunct professor of law at Western State College of Law, teaching Business Law Ethics; and at Whitter Law School, teaching Corporations.