Brigadier General (Retired) Dave Anderson, Chair
Brigadier General (Retired) Dave Anderson was appointed to the North Dakota Ethics Commission in 2019. Dave currently serves as the Coordinator of Military Student Services at the University of Mary, Bismarck, ND. Dave accepted the position at University of Mary upon retiring from the North Dakota Army National Guard after 34 years of service. During his career Dave had many military assignments including serving as the Commander of the 142nd Engineer Combat Battalion during its deployment to Iraq from April 2003 to April 2004. Dave served in multiple assignments of increasing responsibilities in the North Dakota National Guard culminating in his appointment as the Commander of the Army Component, North Dakota National Guard. Dave received his undergraduate degree from North Dakota State University and his Master’s degree from the U.S. Army War College, Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania.
Edwin (Ward) Koeser, Vice-Chair
Edwin (Ward) Koeser grew up on a farm near Watford City and after graduating from Dickinson State College, joined the North Dakota National Guard. Ward taught school in Terry, Montana in the 1970’s and in 1978 moved to Williston to start a communications company known as Kotana Communications. He sold the business and retired in 2017. Ward was elected mayor of Williston in 1994 and served in that capacity for 20 years, retiring in 2014. During the last four years of his term, he witnessed a doubling of the population due to an oil boom in the region. Mr. Koeser serves on several local boards and on the Garrison Diversion Conservancy District Board. He also is a trustee on the board of Oklahoma Wesleyan University. Ward was appointed to the North Dakota Ethics Commission in 2019. Ward and his wife, Joetta, have three grown children and nine grandchildren.
Cynthia Lindquist, PhD, Commissioner
Dr. Lindquist has been president of Cankdeska Cikana (Little Hoop) Community College (CCCC) since 2003. CCCC serves the Spirit Lake Dakota reservation community, employs about 120 people, averages 200 students per semester with a general fund budget of approximately $12 million. Dr. Lindquist is a member, Spirit Lake Dakota Nation, Fort Totten, ND and her Dakota name is Star Horse Woman (Ta’Sunka Wicahpi Win). As a Bush Foundation Leadership Fellow, Dr. Lindquist earned a PhD in educational leadership from the University of North Dakota; a Master’s in Public Administration with an emphasis on tribal health systems from the University of South Dakota; and a bachelor’s in Indian Studies/English from the University of North Dakota. Dr. Lindquist serves on the Executive Committee for the American Indian Higher Education Consortium (AIHEC); is a Board member for the American Indian College Fund; and a member of the North Dakota Ethics Commission.
Ronald Goodman, Commissioner
Ron Goodman was born in Grand Forks, North Dakota in 1947. He was raised primarily in Rolla and Napoleon, North Dakota. He graduated from high School from Assumption Abbey Prep School, Richardton, North Dakota in 1965. Ron attended Notre Dame University, transferred to St. John’s University, Minnesota, and graduated with a BS in Psychology in 1969. He served in the U.S. Air Force from 1969 to 1973. While in the Air Force, he did graduate work through the University of Southern California and attended the University of North Dakota (UND) after his discharge from the military. Ron received a Masters degree from UND in 1974 in guidance and counseling. Ron worked for a North Dakota human service center in Mandan from 1974 to 1978. He attended the UND School of Law from 1978 to1981 and received a JD degree from UND in 1981. He entered private law practice in Oakes, North Dakota in 1981 and continued until 1991 when he assumed the position of Dickey/LaMoure County Judge. He served as county judge until 1995 when he was elected to a North Dakota District Judge position. Ron served as district judge until 2009 when he retired and assumed a surrogate judge position. He resigned that position to assume his role on the North Dakota Ethics Commission in 2019. Ron has taught business law as an adjunct professor for both Valley City State University and the University of Mary. He is a member of the Oakes, ND Legion and VFW, the Oakes Lions Club, and St. Charles Borromeo Catholic Church. Ron currently serves on the Oakes Area Community Foundation and the Oakes School Foundation. Ron married Mary Jo (Kambeitz) Goodman in 1968. Ron and Mary Jo have two children, Chris and Eric, and five grandchildren, Katie, Reid, John, Faith and Betsy. They also have four granddogs.
MG Murray Sagsveen (NDARNG Ret.), Commissioner
Murray Sagsveen has served the public for nearly five decades as a government official, private attorney, military judge advocate, and member of nonprofit governing boards. After graduating from Concordia College (Moorhead, MN) and the University of North Dakota School of Law (Grand Forks, ND), he also attended the U.S. Army War College. He has extensive experience in state government, having served as Legislative Assistant to Governor Arthur Link, Director of Legal Services for the State Water Commission, Solicitor General for Attorney General Allen Olson, State Health Officer for Governor Ed Schafer, and Chief of Staff for Chancellor Larry Skogen, North Dakota University System. After active duty in the Republic of Korea, he joined the North Dakota National Guard. His final assignment was the Army National Guard Special Assistant to The Judge Advocate General of the Army, which is the senior judge advocate position in the Army National Guard. He retired in 1996 as a brigadier general. He was later recalled to state active duty as a major general in 1997 and 2011 to coordinate flood recovery efforts in Grand Forks and Minot, respectively. Mr. Sagsveen has advised or served on nonprofit governing boards for nearly forty years, including ten years as the general counsel for an international medical specialty organization. He now volunteers as the synod attorney for the Western North Dakota Synod, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, and legal advisor to many other nonprofit organizations. Mr. Sagsveen is married to Kristi Sagsveen. Their son is an assistant attorney general (Bismarck), and their daughter is employed in an upholstery business (Minneapolis).
Rebecca Binstock, Executive Director
Rebecca Binstock began serving as the Executive Director of the North Dakota Ethics Commission in September 2022. Prior to serving in this role, she had the privilege to serve as the pro se law clerk with the United States District Court for the District of North Dakota. Ms. Binstock is originally from Bismarck. She graduated from the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, in 2006, with a B.A. in Biology, Society, and Environment. Rebecca then continued her education, earning a M.S. in Education, Teaching, & Learning from Northern State University, Aberdeen, South Dakota, in 2009.
Rebecca taught biology, chemistry, and physics at Aberdeen Central High School in Aberdeen, South Dakota from 2007 to 2009. She then attended the University of North Dakota School of Law and graduated magna cum laude in 2012. During law school, Rebecca was a lawyering-skills teaching assistant, served as the Outside Articles Editor for the North Dakota Law Review, and was a co-founder of the Environmental Law Society. Rebecca was elected to the Order of the Coif and Order of the Barrister.
Rebecca began her legal career as an associate with Zuger Kirmis & Smith, focusing on insurance defense and litigation. In 2013, she accepted a term law clerk position with the Honorable Judge Daniel Hovland with the United States District Court for the District of North Dakota. She transitioned to serve as the pro se law clerk for the District Court in 2014 and continued to serve in that role until commencing her service with the Ethics Commission. Rebecca also has been an Adjunct Professor at the University of Mary and is owner of Simple Sugar LLC, a local cotton candy company. Rebecca and her husband, Mark, are proud parents of three children and enjoy spending time with their family, as well as running and other outdoor activities.
Logan Carpenter, General Counsel
Logan Carpenter received his Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science, magna cum laude, from the University of Jamestown in 2017. While at the University of Jamestown, Logan played alto saxophone in the concert and jazz bands, worked as a teaching assistant, and was selected as a College Fellow in Political Science. Following his undergraduate studies, Logan attended law school at the University of North Dakota School of Law where he graduated magna cum laude in 2020. During law school, he was actively involved as a member of the International Legal Honor Society of Phi Delta Phi, as a lawyering-skills teaching assistant, and as the Managing Editor and Co-Symposium Editor of the North Dakota Law Review. Logan was inducted into the Order of the Coif and the Order of Barristers upon graduation.
After law school, Logan served as a judicial law clerk to the Honorable Gerald VandeWalle at the North Dakota Supreme Court. Thereafter, he continued his career as a judicial law clerk to the Honorable Clare Hochhalter, Magistrate Judge for the District of North Dakota.
Alisha Maier, Operations Administrator
Alisha Maier is a Bismarck State College graduate with an AAS in Business Management. Prior to joining the North Dakota Ethics Commission, Alisha served as the Operations Director at Missouri Slope Areawide United Way and in multiple high-level administrative roles at DistributionNOW.
Alisha resides in Mandan, ND with her husband, Seth, their three children, Cadence, Ryker, and Jayla, two dogs, Ava and Brady, and a cat, Herman. In her free time, she enjoys spending time with her family, going on motorcycle rides with her husband, and strength training at the gym.