The RCMP protects which head of state, what is your answer?
A) Australia
B) New Zealand
C) United Kingdom
D) Canada
E) They have no protection role
5 Shocking Things About the Trayvon Martin Case
By Mark “Six” James CPO, EPS
There has been a lot of discussion about multiple topics surrounding the Trayvon Martin and George Zimmerman case. In my humble opinion most of it is off base and people have attempted to connect issues which I feel are unrelated and only choose to cloud the issue.
Whenever you talk 2nd Amendment people start to draw a line in the sand. If you bring race into the topic one side or the other stops listening. If a white man kills a black teen emotions are high. If a black man kills a white teen emotions are high. Kids dying get all of us supercharged.
Let me try and disconnect some of the connections which have been made so far. In my mind, HERE ARE 5 THINGS this case is not about:
• 2nd Amendment – this is not about the right to Keep and Bear Arms. I wish people would please stop trying to make it be.
• Race – as I said above kids dying gets everyone upset, regardless of nationality, gender or socioeconomic status.
• Self-Defense and Deadly force are related but not the same. You can use force to defend yourself but all self-defense actions don’t grant you the ability to use deadly force.
• Castle Doctrine – a person has no duty to retreat when their home is attacked. Neither party was attempting to protect their dwelling.
• Stand your Ground – a person may use deadly force without the obligation to retreat. I don’t think anyone should have to retreat to protect themselves from severe bodily harm or death. History has shown the sequence of events often move faster than the law abiding citizens could retreat to a safe place.
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By Doc Rogers
Here is a simple and short 3-part checklist to keep in mind if you want to make it “big” in the business:
Before all bodyguard assignments:
• Be clean-cut and presentable.
• Have a good comfort level.
• Maintain professional posture, demeanor and gestures.
• Visualize only positive things you want to happen, but plan for the worst.
• Mentally rehearse and keep your objectives clearly in mind.
During all bodyguard assignments:
• Think before you speak to the client.
• Listen to the client with respect.
• Make the client feel as if they are the only one who matters to you.
• Stay firmly on the path of providing professional protection to your client.
• Be a well-organized and hardworking.
After all bodyguard assignments:
• Be willing to pay and price, go any distance, to achieve your bodyguard career goals.
• Learn from your mistakes and don’t let unexpected challenges throw you off course.
• Program yourself to think positively, devise your career strategies and take action.
• Invest in your education and professional development.
• Knowledge must be achieved through hardwork.
• Stay humble and listen to those who have walked the path before you.
• Keep at it and never quit; don’t lose faith – get a grip and keep instep.
These simple tips have served me well for over 20 years in the trade. If you stay firmly on the path, keep true to yourself, never tire, never rest and never give up, you will surely make it big in the bodyguard trade. All the best and God speed.
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Add one more to the list. It seems that another disgruntled bodyguard, Leonard Taylor Mark Wahlberg’s former bodyguard is planning to write a tell-all book about his experiences.
Taylor told the New York Daily News that he feels “used” by various former clients. “Why should I respect their privacy when they don’t care about me?” he told the paper.
Taylor, who describes himself as a 6-foot-5, 320-pound “gentle giant,” developed relationships with Bruce Willis, Uma Thurman, Paris and Nicky Hilton, “Entourage” actor Kevin Connolly, and Sudbury’s own Chris Evans.
But he’s particularly bitter about Wahlberg, whom he claims “filled my head with dreams and then kicked me to the curb.”
Transitioned from club bouncer to bodyguard when R&B artist Ray J hired him in 1995, Taylor claims he spent more than three years protecting (and partying) with Wahlberg, but he “didn’t pay me a dime.”
A call and email to the actor’s rep was not returned. After years of protecting celebrities, the down-on-his-luck bodyguard says he’s ready to expose them in a tell-all book.
Taylor says that, with the exception of Willis, his famous former clients and friends abandoned him when he battled drug addiction, depression and homelessness from 2004-05 and, more recently, from 2008-11. “I did a lot for a lot of people,” says Taylor, who adds that he’s sober and working security for nightclubs again.
“I saved people’s lives and then when I was down on my luck, everyone turned their backs on me.”
He claims Wahlberg promised to take care of him as a member of his original “Entourage” just as the actor’s breakout performance in “Boogie Nights” made him a movie star. Their relationship ended in 2001 when the two got into a headlines-making fight outside a downtown Manhattan club.
Taylor, who’s African-American, claims Wahlberg started the scrap when he directed a racially insensitive remark at him. He eventually sued Wahlberg, who he alleges bit him during the scuffle, but dropped the legal action because, he says, “I genuinely like Mark.” One of Taylor’s last high-profile clients was Thurman, who he famously rescued from a stalled elevator in 2006.
After the incident, Taylor says the “Kill Bill” star “was the nicest person in the world for 24 hours” but then “went back to being nasty and cold.”
Her attitude “just sucked the life out of me,” he says. Taylor declined to reveal the name of his co-writer but says they’re “90% done” with the manuscript and will shop it upon completion.
By Doc Rogers
Here are a few tips for making 2012 a success both personally and professionally.
Help Others. Bodyguard Careers, the President; Harlan “Hucky” Austin and I feel it’s an honor and a pleasure to help others in the industry. It always makes us feel good to know that we are providing solid information to improve the personal and professional lives of our readers. We encourage all our readers to do the same.
You should help others in the industry with your time, EP experience and skills. A little assistance and advice goes a long way. The more you help others, the more kindness you will receive from others in the industry accordingly from the law of reciprocity.
Learn Something New. Make a promise to learn something new in the industry. This trade of ours’ calls for lifelong learning; if you are not learning you are rusting. I’ve been in the industry 20 plus years and have my list of learning activities for 2012 include; learn a new language, write a new book and take a course in the scientific pursuit of stalking. What are your learning activities for 2012?
Keep Accountable. Accountability starts with writing down your personal and career goals and checking off the progress you have made on a daily, weekly and monthly basis. This will make a huge difference in boosting your accountability for goal accomplishment.
Goal Achievement. Make your personal and professional goals realistic so you will have a good chance of achieving all of them. Stay ambitious, but break each of your goals down into small workable ones to help you reach them more easily and in a timely manner. Keep safe and God speed.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Jurors heard opening statements Monday in the trial of two high-ranking members of local chapters of the Pagans Motorcycle Club who are accused of acting as armed bodyguards for the violent club’s national vice president.
Elmer Luke “Tramp” Moore and Richard Timothy “Lucky” Weaver face charges after federal authorities say both of the men carried firearms in an effort to protect Pagans National Vice President Floyd “Jesse” Moore, who is also Elmer Moore’s father. Click on link to read the rest of the article: http://wvgazette.com/News/201203200153