History S.E.C. 310 is an established company in New York since December 15, 1987. The main goal of this company is to protect and save the life of those people under our responsibility. We are a private security company which is specialized in protecting our little ones, we work in private schools. We are hired by private contractors and right now we are working with 100 private schools. In this company, we have plans for any type of attack that can happen in New York. We have around 1,500 employees who go through a physical and psychological evaluation before they start working with us. Those are people with experience, meaning they had worked with the NYPD or have some type of knowledge about the military and law enforcement. S.E.C 310 have
DCAMM employee Carl Duemling’s attitude and the way he conducts buisness reflects poorly as a state employee and an employee of DCAMM. Duemling attempts to verbally disapline ISA officers. This is not the first time he has displayed such behavior and I am sure it will not be the last. Duemling reapetedly threatens ISA officers jobs. As Supervisor of the Charles F. Hurley building I will not tolorate such bevaior toward my officers. Myself and the officers assigned to the Hurley are well aware of what needs to be done to secure the building properly. Duemling forgets it was my staff and I who trained him on policies and procedures associated with the sucurity of the building.
offices utilizing special weapons and tactics to cope with the new level of violence and
I have organized this paper into five distinct sections; mission, task organization, capabilities, limitations, and finally the conclusion. After the reading and comprehension of this paper, you should have gained a basic understanding of the Special Forces (SF) Chemical Reconnaissance Detachments (CRD). The following paper is mixed with Unclassified (UCI) and For Official Use Only (FOUO) information. FOUO is annotated at the beginning of all For Official Use Only information, the rest of the paper is UCI. If you wish to share this information paper with others, please at a minimum; confirm identity of the person prior to providing (FM 380-5, 2000). For further handling instructions please refer to FM 380-5, or contact me, I will gladly answer all questions.
Problem Statment:You have to figure out how many total various sized squares are in an 8 by 8 checkerboard. You also have to see if there is a pattern to help find the number of different sized squares in any size checkerboard.Process: You have to figure out how many total different sized squares you can make with a 8x8 checkerboard. I say that there would be 204 possible different size squares in an 8x8 checkerboard. I got that as my answer because if you mutiply the number of small checker boards inside the 8x8 and add them together, you get 204. You would do this math because if you find all of the possible outcomes in the 8x8, you would have to find the outcome for a 7x7, 6x6, 5x5, 3x3, and 2x2 and add the products of
The general topic for this literature review will be an examination of the Department of Defense and the National Guard in terms of Homeland Security. The areas of Homeland Defense and Civil Support will be primary subsections of Homeland Security which will be reviewed. For purposes of defining a time period none of the literature reviewed will be prior to September 11, 2001. The reasoning for this being to examine Homeland Defense using literature pertaining to 9/11 and the Boston Marathon Bombing, and Civil Support using literature pertaining to Hurricane Katrina.
Preventing workplace violence such as active shooter incidents can be a challenge because for the most part these
Two weeks earlier in the darkness of an early April morning, I stand surrounded by close to three hundred other soldiers, filled with excitement and uncertainty. The air is heavy with the promise of another scorching day with the humidity reaching hundred percent. This day is called Zero Day. This is the day that determines which of the close to three hundred potential candidates get to make up the next class of two hundred Air Assault Students. The day begins early, 0330 to be exact, and with a lot of yelling. Immediately we are instructed to form one mass formation, the yelling continues. The Air Assault Sergeants, otherwise know as Black-shirts because of their distinctive uniform, take command. This is their yard and they make sure each and every one of us understands that. One by one soldiers are called out of ranks to receive their roster number. From this point on I am no longer be known as SGT Nealand, now I am Roster Number 442 or simply 442.
Under KRS 411.190 if a person is on the property for a recreational purpose and is not charged a fee by the possessor of the land then the statute applies, with recreational purpose defined in the statute to include, but not limited to, activities such as swimming, fishing, hunting, nature study, picnicking, or enjoying scenic sites. Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 411.190.
Due to the limited resources of the Secret Services, the assistance by the state level officials in risk management is to identify the risks and threats, prioritize them, and direct the federal, state, and local resources to act to minimize the likelihood of their occurrence and mitigate their consequences (Steiner, 2009). This process enables the stat leader to prioritize mitigation steps that can be taken based on the potential occurrence of risk and the economic and political capital available to such action (Steiner, 2009). Responses to risks such as Mark’s threats could fall in the major categories of prevention, protection, and response. In this intelligence is used to understand the threat as part of the risk-management process in which both current intelligence and longer term threat analysis are required to plan for management to make executive decisions and actions before such a crisis
4. Schlosser, Eric, How to Make the Country’s Most Dangerous Job Safer (Jan 2002), The Atlantic Monthly, USA, retrieved 4 June 2007 from: http://www.mcspotlight.org/media/press/mcds/theatlanticmontjan2002.html
Although most security measures passively make schools safer, it is not nearly enough to prevent an individual who intends on creating mass violence from completing his or her task. State representatives, national organizations, school staff, and parents need to come together to figure out the most reliable ways to prevent an active shooter situation from occurring in their schools. One solution that has been active is many schools have partnered with local law enforcement agencies to provide a police officers to patrol school grounds....
Has the thought ever crossed your mind that you could be gunned down while tabulating this month’s sales figures, attending a working review of a future briefing or simply having coffee with a co-worker while you talk about the upcoming weekends plans? Perhaps it should, it crossed my mind several times after listening on the phone to the panic, screams and faint sound of gunfire occurred at the Washington Navy Yard. Despite my training and years of experience it seems that retirement has dulled my sight somewhat, I put those lenses back on a took a hard look at the building I work in between 40-50 hours a week a now see that it is a potential slaughterhouse. A design accentuated by limited exits within sight of one another, closed off office spaces and limited internal locks would provide an advantages to an active shooter with even limited skill.
...build a sturdy foundation of sustainable financial management practices that will support the nation’s safety against Department operations for years to come. It will take continued shared efforts to address the cost associated with the tasked of safety against all threats on our nations.
Vossekuil, Bryan. The Final Report and Findings of the Safe School Initiative: Implications for the Prevention of School Attacks in the United States. Washington, D.C: The Secret Service, 2002. Print.
Since opening in 2012, the Children’s Hospital that I work for has experienced several threats of verbal and/or physical violence from parents, visitors, and patients to clinical staff; domestic violence amongst parents visiting during their child’s hospital stay; occurrences in which teen and adult gunshot wound victims have been dropped off via personal vehicle to the emergency department; and retrieval of several weapons that have entered the hospital, only to be discovered by visitors and patients volunteering the information of possessing them; for there are no metal detectors to discover these weapons. In recent years, other hospitals in the area have experienced worse. Such as the Pulse mass shooting that occurred 0.4 miles from a hospital