Price:
Monday, February 28, 2011
4 Oz Ounce Magnum Red Pepper Spray w/ UV Dye
Women's Self Defense Training - Be Equipped
Be Equipped: (necessities such as tools or provisions.) Being equipped with the proper personal security and self defense tools whether it is a lethal, or non-lethal, or an alternative self defense tool, can greatly impact your personal security in a positive way. They are an important part of an overall self defense strategy.
Lethal: (Capable of causing death.) Just the definition of a lethal Personal Secuirty and Self Defense tools causes some people to fear, with good reason. When you carry a lethal one there is a great responsibility that inherently comes with it. A lethal tool can be a very effective choice with proper training and practice.
· Guns, particularly pistols are the most common lethal self defense device.
· They come in a variety of different calibers and sizes to fit each individuals needs.
· If you carry it for self defense; that would imply that you would be willing to use it, possible taking another humans life to save your own.
· You must insure that you get proper training, required permits, store it properly to avoid any accidents,and practice with it regularly.
Non-lethal: Many people choose non-lethal self defense tools for obvious reasons.A non-lethal self defense tools can give you the opportunity to flee from a dangerous situation.
· Pepper spray is a non-lethal non-toxic aerosol spray used for self defense. The active ingredient in pepper spray is a naturally occurring substance called Oleoresin Capsicum or "OC". Pepper spray comes in dispersal types: Fogger, Stream, and Foam. Pepper spray offers the most bang for the buck of all non-lethal security products.
· TASERS are non-lethal electroshock devices for self defense purposes only that disrupt the body's neuromuscular systems using electrical currents. They come in three different models; the C2 which is fashionable compact, the ML18 advanced TASER resembles a gun in shape and size, and the X26C that is gun shaped and offers many features.
Alternative: An alternative personal security tool is anything you can find wherever you are. They can be both lethal and non-lethal depending on the self defense tool used, placement and power of the strike on the offender. When it comes down to it you do what you have to in order to flee. Let me give you some examples of possible self defense tools in your car, home, or on your person. Because of liabilities I won't be explaining how to use these items; however the element of surprise is usually on your side with one of these self defense tools.
· In the Car; ice scrapers, snow brushes, keys, sunglasses, a hard sun glass case, CD or CD case etc.
· At Home; any aerosol can, a tooth brush, T.V remotes, drinking glasses, kitchen utensils, books, trash cans etc.
· On your person; would be your wallet, loose change, pen or pencil, cell phone, comb, umbrella etc.
· This is by no means an exhaustive list when you consider almost anything can be used as an alternative self defense tools. The key to any alternative self defense tools is that they don't appear as self defense tools and give you the element of surprise. By holding correctly, striking with force in the right area they are effective.
In Summary, with any self defense personal security products you should follow the laws and regulations in your area, practice with it and realize the moral and legal responsibilities that you take upon yourself when you carry them. Though it is never guaranteed, these items can give you the upper hand and a chance to flee. In future articles, additional rules will help you maximize your personal security and safety. Remember the best time to learn your lesson about personal security and self defense is before something happens.
Adam Sisterhen is the president of Your Personal Security Store (s90x.com), self defense instructor, author of personal security and self defense articles and a Rotarian. He is a proud advocate and a firm believer in personal security and self defense training and products that help protect you, your family and your loved ones.
To find the products talked about in this article and a wealth of information check these links below.
For the quality personal security and self defense products visit [http://www.s90x.com] Security to the 90th power!
For insights into products and personal security and self defense visit http://www.yourpersonalsecuritystore.blogspot.com
Sunday, February 27, 2011
How would you survive this?
How would you survive this?
5 lessons learned from a deadly encounter with an “unarmed” subject
In Waterloo, Iowa, a suspect is “unarmed” — but still very dangerous — in a textbook case for never underestimating a “weaponless” opponent
Many of you martial artist and Joe Badasses think you are pretty tough and can handle yourself on the street. But let me tell you, after 30 years in security and Law Enforcement martial art school fighting is nothing…and I mean nothing like the real thing. Could you survive This?
When Officer Steven Bose finished the fight with a round to his attacker’s chest, his throat was filling with blood and he thought his right eye had been gouged from his head. He was prone on the ground and screaming in pain, while his partner groped in the dark, trying to find his eyeball. Bose seemed a textbook example of “grievous bodily harm.”
But relatives of the suspect alleged in the media that it was Bose who really was the villain in the drama. His use of gunfire was “excessive force,” they claimed — and they played a card that often stirs deep doubts in the civilian mind: Their kinsman wasn’t even armed when the cop shot him dead.
Before the matter was resolved, Bose was exposed to the possibility of criminal charges. For pulling the trigger during the most desperate struggle of his career, he could have gone to prison for murder.
Bose and his acting chief, Captain John Beckman of the Waterloo (Iowa) PD, recently wanted to help PoliceOne reconstruct the ordeal as a cautionary case. But City Atty. James Walsh, leery of a possible civil suit, muzzled them.
Fortunately, the county attorney who handled a grand jury hearing of the shooting and a nationally recognized use-of-force expert who consulted on the incident see it as a teaching opportunity that can help other LEOs. In exclusive interviews, they have supplied the first public details of the late-shift nightmare that began, as life threats so often do, as a perfectly ordinary call.
The run was dispatched as a disorderly, says Black Hawk County Atty. Thomas Ferguson. At 0218 that Saturday last September, an exasperated wife told a 911 operator that she and her husband had earlier had “a big argument,” and now he’d come back home drunk. She’d locked him out, and he was sitting on the porch steps outside their side door. She wanted the cops to “remove him.”( Derek’d commentary – a domestic dispute is one of the worse situations to be involved in)
There was no foreshadowing of violence, Ferguson says. “It wasn’t even dispatched as a domestic assault. She just wanted him to leave. It was a normal call like they’d been on hundreds of times before.”
Officers Bose and Jamie Sullivan arrived in separate units and headed up the driveway toward the porch, which was illuminated by a single bulb above the door. A ride-along accompanying Bose that night trailed behind and kept his distance.
At the porch, just beyond an SUV parked in the driveway of the modest, one-story house, they greeted the wife, her father whom she’d called for support before ringing 911, and, the biggest among them by far, the intoxicated husband — 6’4”, 260 lbs., a 31-year-old construction worker “accustomed to heaving around big chunks of concrete,” as a source familiar with the case put it later. (Derek – already a situation brewing. With his size I would have called for backup)
The “big argument,” as it turned out, was over BS: the husband had taken offense at their two young daughters wearing Packers jerseys. “It didn’t look like there were any real problems,” Ferguson says. But as the officers tried to sort things out, “the wife started getting more agitated, and they wanted to be sure nothing further happened.”
Sullivan stayed with her and her father. Bose, 29, with nearly seven years on the department, took the husband over behind the SUV, a few yards away.
There, the call went south in a hurry.
Bose and the man engaged in some discussion about his finding another place to stay. The man rejected that notion, saying he just wanted to go in the house and go to bed. With a curse, he started toward the side door. Bose put his left hand on the subject’s chest to stop him, and the night exploded. (Derek – cops often become complacent. He should have maintained a safe distance from a big, intoxicated dude like this)
BAM!!! The man smashed his fist into Bose’s face. (Derek – too close) Momentarily dazed, the officer woozily grabbed him and tried to hip-toss him “but underestimated his size,” Ferguson says (Derek – judo and BJJ is not for the street!).
The two went down on the driveway, Bose landing on his hands and knees, with his attacker partially on the officer’s back, grappling his head and neck. Bose struggled desperately to free himself but couldn’t. He said afterward the assailant threatened to kill him as they fought. (Derek – Bad guy had his back. ALready big trouble. Could have killed the cop)
Hearing the commotion, Sullivan rushed over from the porch and began hammering the atttacker on the head with his fists. The man “did not release his hold,” Ferguson says. Instead, he escalated the attack. (Derek- See, fist to the hard head is not the answer)
“Somehow,” the prosecutor says, “he got a hand inside Bose’s left cheek” and started fish-hooking it. He pulled on it so hard that “he actually ripped the cheek away from where it attaches to the jawbone. Bose’s mouth started filling with blood.” (Derek – Why didn’t the cop bite his fingers off)
With Sullivan continuing to strike him, the attacker moved his other hand to Bose’s face and pushed hard and relentlessly against his right eye, whipsawing the officer’s head as he simultaneously yanked on his cheek and gouged his eye. To Bose, it felt like his face was tearing apart and his eye popping out. He could scarcely breathe. (Derek- This is why I teach eye gouges. This is how bad guys REALLY fight, and you have to do the same to defeat them. Chek out my DVD’d at http://specialagentcombativesystem.com)
Reaching at what seemed like an impossible angle, he managed to wrest his TASER out of its holster and fired it up and back at his assailant. “The probes did not make sufficient contact to complete a circuit,” Ferguson says. The man “neither relented nor released.” (Derek – At this point this is a deadly force situation already. But the cop reaches for a TASER. He was not ready for a REAL self defense encounter)
Sullivan fired his TASER, too. Again, no reaction. Sullivan then attempted a drive stun; the suspect still showed no evidence of relenting. Struggling against the pain and the suspect’s crushing weight, Bose was able eventually to reach and draw his Glock.
He fired twice into his assailant at point-blank range. “We believe the first round hit him in the thigh but did not stop him,” Ferguson says. “The second struck him in the chest. He finally released.” He was dead at the scene.
Bose thought his eye had been gouged from his head, Ferguson says. His anguished cries of pain led Sullivan to think so, too. The partner frantically searched the shadows nearby trying to find it.
Actually, Bose’s eye was lacerated but still in place. The agony was so intense it just felt like it had been ripped out.
The “shots fired” call was logged at Waterloo PD at 0227, less than nine minutes after the wife’s initial complaint.(Derek-It does not take long in a REAL fight)
The suspect’s family wasted no time rallying their forces against the police. On Sunday, dozens of friends and relatives gathered in downtown Waterloo to protest what they said was unjustified and excessive action by officers.
“They shot an unarmed man twice,” his widow was quoted as saying. Her father complained, “They never said they were about to take him to the ground. They never warned him they were gonna’ ‘tase him and they never warned him they were about to shoot.”
The dead man was described as “a gentle giant and loving father…not a violent man,” and protesters told reporters that “officers did not have a legitimate reason to shoot him and [we] can’t understand how he ended up killed.” Records indicate he’d been arrested several times for public intoxication and had been convicted 12 years earlier for assaulting a peace officer, but “marriage and fatherhood changed him,” protesters insisted.
The county attorney’s office consulted on the case with the behavioral scientist Dr. Bill Lewinski, one of the nation’s premier experts on use-of-force dynamics and executive director of the Force Science Institute. Lewinski draws a vivid picture of what Bose and Sullivan were up against in their battle to control the “gentle giant.”
He characterizes the assailant during the incident as “an irrational person who was so distraught and so intensely focused on his own course of action that he couldn’t be influenced by the officers. He was dangerous without a knife or a gun. His empty hands alone could kill. (Derek – that is the reality folks. SO you have to have the same mentality)
“Blows to the head, Tasering, a shot to the leg — his assault continued at the same level through all of them. People that determined have an astounding capacity to override pain. Nothing the officers could have done physically or verbally short of deadly force could have convinced him to stop. They had no choice other than to utterly defeat him — or give up.”
The choke hold/head lock he had on Bose threatened to crush the officer’s larynx, cut off his oxygen, trip his heart into fibrillation, and/or render him unconscious, Lewinski says. Gored deeply enough, the finger jammed in his eye could have penetrated beyond the eyeball into brain matter, with potentially fatal consequences. “Few things have as great a sensory consequence for a human being as a finger in the eye,” he says. “It’s not just a matter of physical pain, it’s a horrendous psychological assault that leads to a high state of desperation in most people.”
He says he considers Bose lucky to have survived the fight.(Derek – Indeed he was. I hope he is trainining now)
Ferguson says his office reviews officer-involved shootings on a case-by-case basis, with some going to a grand jury and some being ruled on internally as to whether deadly force was justified. In this case, largely because of controversy about the subject being “unarmed,” he felt that public confidence would best be assured if the matter was submitted to a grand jury.
Potentially this subjected Steve Bose to significant new risks. If the civilian jury decided his shooting was unwarranted, he could be indicted on counts as serious as murder. And the decision did not have to be unanimous. If five of the jury’s seven members believed he was culpable, he would stand criminally charged. “The stress on an officer in this situation is tremendous,” Ferguson says.
Fortunately, by the time Lewinski’s observations and other evidence in the case had been presented, the grand jurors understood the actions of that fateful night from Bose’s unique perspective. Just before Christmas, the panel returned a “no bill” and Bose was exonerated. He has also been cleared in a separate review by his department.
In January, Bose returned to street patrol, still working midnights and reportedly glad to be back on full duty. His injuries are said to have healed with no permanent major damage, except for thick scar tissue along the inside of his cheek at the base of his jaw, which he feels every time he chews.
Lessons learned? Ferguson and Lewinski combine to offer several:
1. Expect the unexpected. Realize how quickly and surprisingly “unremarkable” calls can turn into life-threatening events. No matter how commonplace a contact may appear, the potential for violence is always present, particularly when you’re dealing with a subject who’s in a chemically altered, emotionally charged state.
2. Don’t underestimate a “weaponless” threat. Hands, elbows, knees, feet, even the human head can inflict devastating damage, not just when you’re dealing with trained martial artists but also with amateurs who are driven by deadly intensity.
3. Recognize hot-button moments. “This situation went to hell when Officer Bose necessarily set limits on the suspect by putting his hand on the man’s chest to keep him from returning to the house and to his wife’s location,” says Lewinski. “When the suspect was touched, it was symbolic of the gates being shut on his options. That is always a moment—a tripping point—of great vulnerability that officers need to be cognizant of. Assaults frequently occur when an officer is either beginning to handcuff a subject or is laying hands on him. Any time you touch a suspect, be prepared for resistance.”
4. Document your calls. If you have portable audio or video equipment, use it. The officers that night were equipped with body mics, but they did not turn them on when they approached the scene. “Recordings could have been useful in confirming what happened,” Ferguson says. “Almost always, they will be helpful to you.”
5. Understand your force options. Typically, state laws sanction the use of deadly force when you reasonably believe you are in danger of serious bodily harm, not just when you fear your life is at risk. “You are not hired to be a blue punching bag,” Lewinski states. “You have a right to defend your life and your well-being, and to hesitate in emphatically ending a dangerous assault on yourself or a partner can be a fatal mistake. The longer a fight goes on, the greater your risk of losing your gun or losing your life.”
Meanwhile, County Attorney Ferguson has arranged for his community to become better educated about the realities of police use of force. Next September, just about on the anniversary of the shooting, he and the city of Waterloo have contracted with the Force Science Institute to present a two-day program for law enforcement personnel on the latest research findings related to human dynamics in force confrontations — followed by a special half-day in which Lewinski will brief more than 100 invited elected officials, reporters, human rights activists, and other influential civilians on the truths and myths of officer-involved shootings. For the rest of that day, the group will be exposed to simulator training at a local college law enforcement academy.
Ferguson says, “We hope to have them walk away with more reasonable expectations of police actions and a better understanding of why officers act as they do”
This is exactly why you need the type of training I offer in Special Agent Combative System and Brutal Beyond Belief. Check out my website for more real life survival training.
To Learn how to handle yourself in these types of situations, be sure to visit http://www.specialagentcombativesystem.com often.
Saturday, February 26, 2011
LA98001 Kimber Pepper Blaster II Pepper Spray Gun
Features:
- 90 MPH blast hits target instantly
- Debilitates for 45-60 minutes
- Just point & shoot
- Right or left hand, from any angle
- No blowback, drifting, or loss of pressure
- Ergonomic grip
- Wrist strap attachment
- Pyrotechnic power drive
- Swing-away trigger guard
- Rear sight/Front sight
- 2 Charge nozzles
This unit is not reusable and should be properly disposed of once both shots are discharged.
Measures: 4.7" L x 1.0" W x 3.3" H
Content: Two 0.21 oz. non-refillable cartridges containing of a 10% solution of liquid OC (2.4% capsaicinoids)
Price: $39.95
3 Self-Defense Principles You Must Remember
Regardless of whether you're using a Kubotan self-defense keychain, a handgun, or unarmed tactics, there are certain undeniable concepts and principles - truths if you will - about a self-defense encounter that must be acknowledged and planned for. To overlook or ignore even one of these is to be done at your own risk and peril.
While there are many more principles that I consider to be critical, we'll start with a few of the most basic, and therefore the most important here. Please note that I used the words "basic" and "important" in the same sentence. Often, students (and teachers for that matter) tend to see the basics as "necessary evils to learn in order to get to the really cool stuff." When, in fact, the basics ARE the "cool stuff," and...
...without them, you wouldn't be able to do anything else!
If you're new to the topic of real-world self-defense, burn these principles into your subconscious mind so that you'll never forget them. If you consider yourself to be an old veteran or an advanced student, you might still want to look over them, just to make sure that you're not missing anything important.
Self-Defense Principles to "Live" By
1. You Are Your Own First-Line of Self Defense
Remember that, when the attack happens, more often than not, you will be alone. And, if you are with someone else, then chances are even greater that you are facing multiple attackers.
I talk a lot in my other books and articles, especially in "The Karate-Myth," about the fact that no one else, not even the police, can save you. And that goes for your teacher as-well, regardless of how good he or she is.
You will either be prepared or not when the penny drops. That means that...
...it will be your responsibility to do what you must to survive until help, back-up, or whatever, arrives.
And that goes equally well for those of us who have been trained to know better. Like the story of an off-duty police officer who, having years of training, carried her firearm with her everywhere she went.
Until one day, she went out to lunch with mom and dad.
Since they were just going into a fast-food place for lunch and mom and dad didn't care much for guns, she decided to leave the weapon in her car.
During lunch, a man entered the restaurant and killed several patrons...
...including her parents.
Though she got out with her life, the ONE TIME she needed her training and her weapon...
...her parents died.
Imagine living with that for the rest of your life!
So, if you're going to train yourself with a Kubotan, self-defense keychain, handgun, or any other weapon, make sure that, not only is it WITH you when you need it, that if possible...
...it's IN your HAND!
2. Keep It Short and Simple
Sport martial artists kill me. Not that they can anymore than anyone else, but what they do, and the way they think, is what leaves me shaking my head in confusion and disbelief.
Anyone who's ever been in a real-world encounter, where they were fighting for life and limb, knows that seconds can feel like an eternity.
SECONDS.
In fact, the average self-defense encounter is over in 6 to 10 seconds. Not minutes.
So much for the money-making climactic fight scenes at the end of a movie, huh? Where the hero takes on the arch-villain for 20 minutes or so.
Sorry. Just doesn't work that way.
In fact, you only store enough glycogen (a type of sugar) in your muscles for fight-or-flight work for about 7 to 11 seconds of full-out work. After that, your body must hold out for another 7 to 11 seconds to produce enough of that magic "juice" to go at it again.
The fact that karate tournaments set things up with a two minute time frame on average is proof that things are not geared towards self-defense. Of course, all the rules that are nonexistent on the street help a little too.
If you've ever been attacked, you probably know that it was over long before two minutes were up (if you were counting). Unless you're running and hiding or pulling the school-boy-fight thing where it looks like a boxing match, you can't physically keep going for longer than your muscles have fuel for.
In addition to this, a self-defense situation is NOT the time nor the place to be showing off your way-cool tricky moves. The attacker doesn't care and, quite frankly, that kind of foolishness is just going to make him...
...fight HARDER!
If you want to win - if you want to survive - if you want to wake up tomorrow on THIS side of the grass, you have got to keep your defenses simple and to the point. Do what you have to do to get him to stop - and do it quickly.
Period.
3. There's a Difference Between a Fight and a Self-Defense Situation
Again, you have to know why you're there.
Are you trying to prove something?
Do you need to be right?
Are you trying to make a point?
Are you afraid of getting something you don't want or losing something you do?
If you are, then...
...you're in a fight - you're fighting!
It's not self-defense, although you might be trying to defend yourself while simultaneously trying to inflict your damage on him.
But, a self-defense situation is different. It's very different...
...before the attack even starts.
The Difference Between Fighting and Self-Defense
What is the difference between a fight and a self-defense situation? I mean, both people are attacking the other, right?
Well...
...not exactly. And, if you've ever been in either or both, you already know the answer.
Simply stated, a fight has two or more combatants who are willing participants in the foray, they are all there by mutual agreement. They all WANT to be there.
Whereas, in a defensive encounter there may be two or more mutually agreeable participants to the event, but...
...they are all on the SAME side!
In a self-defense situation, at least one of the combatants, the victim - the target of the assault - has NOT chosen to be there.
Do you see the difference?
While a self-defense situation and a fight might APPEAR to be the same thing, they are in reality, very different.
So, get over any thoughts, fears, or aversions to fighting. I don't like to fight either. But...
...I have become very good at fighting skills and dealing with a person who wants to fight or attack me.
There is a big difference.
In Today's world of violence, street crime, spousal and child abuse, and terrorism, it is no longer possible to live in denial. It seems that, every day, more and more people are waking up to the realization that violence in some form has touched either them or someone they know. They end up finding out that...
...self-defense training is no longer a choice - it's a responsibility!
Jeffrey M. Miller is the founder of Warrior Concepts International. He is a highly sought-after trainer, consultant, and expert in the areas of self-defense, workplace violence defensive tactics, and personal protection. He is the author of several books, and videos, including: "The Science of Self-Defense," and the dvd, "Danger Prevention Tactics: Protecting Yourself Like a Pro," and is the co-producer of the self-defense & martial arts podcast called KUDEN. For more information and to download your free self-defense report entitled, "Fight Smarter - Not Harder" visit his web site at: http://www.warrior-concepts-online.com
Friday, February 25, 2011
Thursday, February 24, 2011
Is Target Focused Training worth the price?
I arrived at the facility and saw folks of all types. Plain folk, tough guys, wanna bees, and maybe a couple of real operators like me. So we got down to training. When Tim came out I must say I was impressed. I am 6 feet and DOWN to about 225. This guy dwarfed me so that was a plus. But I was not intimidated YET, because I had thumped some big guys before.
Let me tell you that when Tim began his training I became a true believer. It was an incredible time and I learned things about combat that I had never imagined. Also, I loved when we put on Flak vests and went full power against each other. There is just something great about whooping some butt and taking a whooping that really proves that a technique work. The best thing about the program was that it was so easy to learn. By the time I left the training I literally bought every tape and book available, spending quite a bit of money. But I took home something of much more value. I was the National Defensive Tactics and Firearms Program Manager for the Department of the Treasury Office of the Inspector General and I took Tim's training back to our agency and incorporated what I could into our training. I say that because in the course I attended, it was not made for loss enforcement. It was meant for the street and life and death situations. Treasury would not allow us to do some of this stuff because it was no joke deadly. I truly became a much deadlier human weapon, capable of dealing with any...and I mean any situation.
So was the training worth the $5000 I paid for it plus the extra $1000 I paid for the tapes and books. INDEED IT WAS...no BS. What Time teaches can save your life.
Called “the most devastatingly powerful, scientifically-proven self-defense system in the world today,” Target Focus Training(TFT) lets you quickly stop any attacker dead in his tracks by inflicting crippling pain from injury to easily damaged body parts using simple, intuitive movements you can instantaneously do… even if you’re non-athletic, small or out-of-shape.
It’s uniquely effective methods (which employ violence as your ultimate survival tool) are simple and easy to master yet are so devastatingly effective at close combat they’re used by military and government agencies alike.
For nearly 20 years Tim has been well known in the self-defense & close-combat training world but ‘under-the-radar’ to ordinary folks like you (Not Me). He’s the guy operations like the US Navy SEALS, Army Special Forces and the US Border Patrol call in behind-the-scenes to teach them when it’s “kill-or-be-killed.”
During the last 20 years he’s trained not only these elite military special forces and law enforcement units like mine, but corporate and civilian clientele in New York, Las Vegas, London and other cities around the world using a combination of live training sessions and DVDs.
A sought after public speaker, Tim has spoken to CEO’s, government officials, and business leaders in over 40 countries on how to use these same principles of surviving life-or-death violence in the less life-threatening environment of business.
Tim is co-author of the best-selling book, How To Survive The Most Critical 5 Seconds Of Your Life, and the highly acclaimed online newsletter, Secrets For Staying Alive When Rules Don’t Apply.
If you want to learn no nonsense, real self-defense. Self-defense that will save your life and the lives of your loved ones, then you want to pick up Tim's course Human Weapon TFT because it is the real deal. I know...because I am the real deal too. AND it won't cost you anywhere near what I paid to get it either.
If you truly want an AMAZING expereince you should check out Tim's Live training! Again, well worth the money and he is giving a 25% discount to boot...if you hurry!
Derek
A review of Operational Skills Group LLC. (OSG)
Let me begin by saying that I only recommend the best...and I only work with the best.
Bob Ingersoll is the CEO of OSG. I have known Bob for almost 20 years now. We met while I was going through Language training at the Defense Language Institute before I began a 2 year counter intelligence stint in Turkey. When I met Bob he was teaching Combat Hapkido at a small Tae Kwon Do school I was attending. I convinced him to pursue teaching at the base in Monterey, and the rest, as they say is history. After about a year of training with Bob he awarded me my Black Belt in Combat Hapkido, and he presented me with a charter to open my own school which I did in Turkey. I soon became the Regional Director for Combat Hapkido in Turkey, but that is another story for another review. Let's get back to OSG.
Bob was honorably discharged in 1977 after serving six years during the Viet Nam era, with the 382d Military Police Detachment, United States Army Reserve. Thereafter he began a successful career in civilian Law Enforcement resulting in over 20 years of hands-on experience in the areas of professional law enforcement, Tactical Training and Loss Prevention. Bob’s prior assignments have included Patrol, Field Training, Investigator, Narcotics Investigator, Emergency Response Team Supervisor, and Range master. So Bob is well versed in what works in REAL situations too. I think that is why I was so happy training with him.
Currently retired from the Seaside Police Department in California, Bob today provides high-profile security force training to the US Government as a federal contractor and holds a degree in Administrative Justice.
As the Founder and Director of Combative Arts Association and currently holding the rank of 6th Degree Black Belt in Hapkido Bob is very well versed in the martial arts and in reality based self-defense. Oh, like me he is also a certified firearms and defensive tactics instructor.
So Bob is a true operator. His corporation socialized in teaching integrated modular programs of instruction specific to military, law enforcement, and federal officer training (uniformed officers, specialty agents, high-profile security, covert, and overseas operations) in support of such requirements as Force Protection, Crisis Response, Counter Abduction (Kidnap Prevention), Personal Safety and Defense, Opposed Boarding, Firearms, Advanced Marksmanship, Close Quarters Combat, and Active Counter Measures. His program includes instruction in:
1 | › Small Arms Instruction | SAI |
2 | › Defensive Tactics Instruction | DTI |
3 | › Prisoner Control Instruction | PCI |
4 | › Flight Deck Officer Instruction | FDI |
5 | › Tactical Medical Instruction | TMI |
6 | › Custom Program Instruction | CPI |
7 | › Work for Others Program | WFO |
Unfortunately, Bob does not train civilians. But if you are in Law Enforcement, Security, or Military you can get bob to come share his great courses with you. Oh, and by the way, I am a little biased I must admit because I am one of Bob's instructors.
Derek
The Krav Maga On-Line Course Review
I have studied Krav Maga and I have to tell you that is is a very good fighting system for real life self defense situations. The only problem I have with Krav Maga is the high kick that I think are impractical for real self defense. They taught me to kick guns and knives out of an attackers hand, and I can tell you that that is NOT going to happen in a real fight.
But again, I can tell you that Krav Maga is a very good self defense system. It was developed by the Israeli army and successfully implemented by special army forces, police units and secret service forces for face-to-face combat.
These forces and thousands of civilians have chosen Krav Maga as their preferred self defense method.
Guy Dar, they instructor for this series has 30 years of experience in Krav Maga. He is a top instructor for police units and security services around the world, and has specially designed courses for civilian men,women and children. He has trained many of them to the black belt level in Krav Maga, which is significant.
The course is HUGE. It has 41 videos with the most brutal moves that will crash your attacker and knock him down in seconds. Each video comes both in regular and slow motion, with vocal explanation in the background that explains what you should do – making it easy to learn.You’ll get everything you need to know to emerge safely from an attack!
It also comes with an e-book that details step-by-step explanations, accompanied by pictures that beautifully capture and demonstrate each and every move. The e-book itself is a step-by-step guide to the exact moves that appear in the video movies. You can read the e-book and listen simultaneously to the mp3 files to maximize your mastery of the moves.
And that’s not all! You also get mp3 files that explain each move.You can listen to the voice explanation while reading the e-book – or while driving your car.
I can tell you that Krav Maga is a great fighting system that will definitely allow you protect yourself on the streets. Is it the best…NO, but eliminate the high kicks and you have a great system.
Real World Protection - Online Video Self-Defense Course
A Self-Defense business designed to take over a booming and untapped market. Taught simply and to a high-standard and presented better than the competition. As seen on the Bbc! Visit www.realworldprotection.com/affiliate for promotional materials.
Check it out!
About Me
About Me
My Black Belts are in Combat Hapkido, Tae Kwon Do, Kenpo, and Eskrima.
In addition, I have almost 30 years in Law Enforcement and Security and served in the U.S Navy as a Fighting Seabee, the U.S Air Force as a Special Agent with the Air Force Office of Special Investigations for 15 years and in the U.S Army as a CID special agent. In addition, I have been a Federal Agent for the Defense Intelligence Agency as the Deputy Chief of Protective Services and National Training Director, US Treasury Department as a Special Agent and the National Defensive Tactics and Firearms Program Manager, US Postal Service as a Special Agent and the National Defensive Tactics and Firearms Program Manager US Department of Education as a Special Agent and a firearms instructor.
I also have a set of tapes on sale with a major martial art DVD publisher & Distrubuter, TRS Direct/Fight Fast Video.
I share all of this to let you know that I know what I am talking about when it comes to Self Defense and Reality Based fighting. Yes, I have fought in a lot of tournaments (placing in every one by the way) and I have been involved with the sport of martial arts. But I have honed my skills in real combat situations and know what it takes to survive.
Special Agent Combative Systems
Special Agent Combative Systems
Let's be realistic, in our society the only folks who deal with real life attacks and threats are law enforcement special agents, police officers and soldiers. Guys saying that they are teaching REAL self-defense in most martial arts schools have never really encountered REAL ATTACKS from REAL BAD GUYS. C'mon, how many guys can really be street fighters without ending up in jail or dead. They have not truly tried their techniques in real combat situations.
Most Martial Art systems with their pre-arranged counter attack methods are limited in usefulness because attacks can occur in a variety of ways. The SAC System prepares you for the unexpected -- one of the most pro-active survival training systems ever developed!
Derek A. Smith, the creator of SACS has been a Special Agent and Security operator for 30 years and has studied over a dozen fighting arts. He has also served in the Navy, Air Force and Army in elite units (AFOSI) CID) during desert storm, desert shield, and after 9/11 protecting presidents, military officials and other high level personnel.
With SACS Derek will teach you to have a heightened awareness of your environment -- far beyond the usual visual evaluations. Using responses based on body mechanics, your SACS training shows you how flexible response heightens your chances of survival, and can help minimize physical damage -- without years of significant prior training.
For the experienced martial artist, this training will blend with the other forms of training you have had and give you a solid response system. Practice defense scenarios are executed realistically -- you'll learn the basic techniques, and the keys to using them in comprehensive application. Techniques are practiced and become part of your instinctive reaction. This foundation training, coupled with confidence and personal ingenuity, will give an individual a fighting chance against any violent attack. This method was essential to survival for Special Agents, Law Enforcement Personnel and Soldiers for years.
Receive My FREE series of self defense reports. One provided each week specifically for subscribers. Visit My Site at http://specialagentcombativesystem.com/