As a junior in college, Ware began working as an intern auditor for the Office of the Inspector General of the
U.S. Department of the Interior in 1990. He continued working there after graduation. He was later promoted to supervisor of the office. The
attorney general charged DeJongh with criminal embezzlement of public funds and neglecting to pay over public monies. Ware was later promoted to Eastern Regional Manager. Ware served as the Acting Inspector General from January 9, 2017, until
President Donald Trump appointed him, the
Senate confirmed him, and he was sworn into office on May 24, 2018. He is responsible for independent oversight of SBA’s programs and operations, which normally encompass more than $100 billion in guaranteed loans and nearly $100 billion in Federal contracting dollars. As a result of SBA’s role in the nation’s pandemic response, he is providing oversight of over a trillion dollars of lending authority aimed at stabilizing the nation’s economy and providing vital capital to the nation’s small businesses. He also is a statutory member of the
Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency’s (CIGIE)
Pandemic Response Accountability Committee (PRAC), serving alongside his Inspector General colleagues to provide a whole of Government response to the pandemic oversight effort. Within the PRAC, Inspector General Ware chairs the Subcommittee on Audits. In addition, Inspector General Ware serves as the Chair of the Audit Committee for CIGIE and is a member of CIGIE’s Executive Council. In 2017, Ware helped uncover several contractors that had received federal contracts intended for service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses under false pretenses. One company attempted to qualify by hiring a disabled veteran to officially serve in that role as a figurehead while not actually controlling the company at all. In May 2020, Ware criticized the Small Business Administration's rules for the
Paycheck Protection Program, saying that the Small Business Administration had set stricter rules than Congress wrote into the law created the program, which is causing an "unintended burden" on businesses. Ware also said that the Small Business Administration's failure to provide guidance to financial institutions to prioritize businesses in underserved and rural markets, resulting in fewer loans to their businesses than the law intended. In November 2024, Ware was elected chair of the
Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency (CIGIE), effective Jan. 1, 2025; he succeeded
Mark Greenblatt. On January 24, 2025 President
Donald Trump attempted to dismiss Mr. Ware
along with several other inspectors general. Ware responded that he had not been legally dismissed, as the law required a notification to Congress 30 days in advance. On February 12, he and seven other inspectors general who were fired by Trump filed a lawsuit against the administration, asking that their dismissals be ruled illegal and that they be reinstated. On September 15, 2025, Ware was announced as the next director of the Virgin Islands Waste Management Authority. ==References==