Jonathon Moseley is a licensed attorney in the Commonwealth of Virginia, admitted before the Supreme Court of Virginia (meaning that he is admitted in all the Courts of Virginia). He is admitted in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia and the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. Moseley is a graduate of George Mason University School of Law in Arlington, Virginia, with a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration majoring in Finance from the University of Florida with a graduate year of accounting. Moseley pursued a physics degree at Hampshire College taking courses at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, before changing to business school. He graduated high school from prestigious prep-school Deerfield Academy in Deerfield, Massachusetts After law school, Moseley worked at the public interest law firm "Judicial Watch," and then became in-house counsel for a small businesses SWPP Development Corp and thousand-acre Ticonderoga Farms. After a paid internship in the U.S. Congress, he worked in political public relations at General Daniel Graham's "High Frontier" and the "Center for Peace and Freedom" dealing with foreign policy issues, military preparedness, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, and the Cold War. (The Center was an independent organization created with the help of the Heritage Foundation, with its offices in the Heritage Foundation building.) He spent 5 years in the U.S. Department of Education working with budgeting, government contracting, grants, the auditing of government grants and contracts, and Federal management issues. At the 50-year-old, Maryland-based law firm of Protas, Spivok & Collins, Moseley was responsible for litigation and debt collection cases for the entire State of Virginia. As an associate attorney at Plofchan & Associates he worked on a wide variety of cases from wrongful death to construction disputes, criminal defense, wills, and estate planning. For several years as in-house counsel and Vice President of the Transguardian company. Before and during law school, Moseley brought humanitarian aid to people and churches in Eastern Europe and Russia and helped found a church in Jurmala (Riga), Latvia with Pastor Bob Perry. This led to Moseley teaching sales and management in the private business seminar firm International Trendsetters based in Riga, Latvia. Moseley lived and worked among Latvian society like a native, speaking the local language of business, Russian. This work also led Moseley to write the spy novel Cold Peace.