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News & Media - Canadian Tactical Training Academy

Hamas calls for seizing Israeli soldiers to swap for Palestinian prisoners

xinhuanet.com

A senior official of the Islamic Hamas movement in Gaza on Friday called on Palestinian militants to seize Israeli soldiers and exchange them with Palestinians held in Israeli jails.

The popular, political, media and diplomatic efforts inside and outside “can never be an alternative to the military efforts to rescue our prisoners from the oppressive occupation’s prisons,” said Ahmad Bahar, a Gaza-based Hamas leader and deputy speaker of the Palestinian Legislative Council, in a press statement.

“We should be tireless of making every possible effort to seize Zionist soldiers and exchange them through prisoners swap deals,” Bahar said.

In June 2006, Hamas militants and two other minor armed groups seized the Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit in a cross-border raid southeast of the Gaza Strip. Shalit’s captors asked for the release of 1,000 prisoners in exchange for him.

However, the mediation of Egypt and Germany had so far failed to finalize a prisoner swap deal between Hamas and Israel. Both sides traded accusations that the other was hindering the deal.

Around 6,000 Palestinian and Arab prisoners have been holding a gradual hunger strike in all the 25 Israeli jails for 10 days, protesting tightened measures imposed by the Israeli Prisons Authorities.

Bahar called on the Arab League and its secretary general as well as international rights organizations “to play a more important role to activate the prisoners’ question and help release the Palestinian prisoners.”

“It’s unreasonable that United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki- moon visited Shalit’s family but ignored thousands of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails,” Bahar said.

EXECUTIVE PROTECTION COURSE (July 8-13, 2013)

EXECUTIVE PROTECTION COURSE

In this day and age, the field of personal protection is considered to be a specialization for which agents must combine both proper training and pertinent experience. Although some protection agents represent private entities, generally this is a service carried out by security, police or military forces.

 

This training offers the participant the opportunity of acquiring the fundamental concepts and hands-on training from internationally experienced experts in the fields of personal protection and specialized escorts.

Topics covered:

  • Introduction to executive protection
  • client profiling
  • threat assessments
  • case studies
  • terrorism and your client
  • advance work
  • escort techniques 1-4 agents
  • Day long protection scenario

LEARN DIRECTLY FROM THE PROFESSIONALS WHO TRAIN THE INSTRUCTORS TEACHING IN OTHER SECURITY AND LAW ENFORCEMENT SCHOOLS.

INFO
Date: July 8th-13th
Hours: 09:00-17:00
Cost: Register Before June 10, 2013 – $1350
Register After June 10, 2013 – $1700

To register or more information please call: 1-514-373-8411

Syrious Crimes

REPORTING FROM BEIRUT — Heavy fighting was reported Tuesday in Syria as security forces mounted an offensive in the city of Homs, where activists said seven people were killed.

The government said “armed terrorist gangs” had assaulted a police station, a hospital and a roadway, and tried to assassinate the head of the hospital’s emergency room. Authorities confiscated heavy weapons and explosives and arrested more than 100 “wanted men,” said the official Syrian Arab News Agency.

The city of more than 1 million in west-central Syria has been a hub of the opposition to the rule of President Bashar Assad since anti-regime protests broke out across the country in March. But anti-regime activists say attacks by government security forces in Homs and surrounding communities have escalated in recent days.

The Local Coordinating Committees, a grass-roots group seeking Assad’s ouster, accused the government in a statement of “targeting anything that moves in the streets,” describing “continuous shooting,” outages of electricity and water, and plainclothes security units “roaming the residential neighborhoods.”

Activists have blamed Syrian security forces for attacking peaceful demonstrators, prompting some civilians and army defectors to take up arms. The official news agency blames “terrorist” gunmen for the apparently escalating violence.

 

The Syrian government has barred most journalists from entering the country, making it difficult to obtain independent verification of reports of casualties and damage.

Almost 3,000 people have died in violence in Syria since March, according to the United Nations. The Syrian government says more than 1,000 security personnel have been killed.

CTTA Teaches Intelligent Crowd Control Methodology

Intelligent Crowd Control Methodology (Trade Mark Pending) is an important aspect of CTTA`s training curriculum. This approach adheres to Canadian government guidelines respecting human rights.

Intelligent Crowd Control Methodology allows law enforcement personnel to effectively maintain the peace in a manner that protects the individual demonstrator from injury. CTTA developed this comprehensive proprietary methodology in response to legal requirements in Canada. Acceptance and demand for this approach in world markets soon followed. Governments, armed forces, and police departments desire to maintain the respect of its citizens even under adverse conditions. News clips of bloodied demonstrators on the evening news do not engender respect; quite the opposite, they produce an even more violent response by the crowd.

 


Intelligent Crowd Control Methodology helps the law enforcement officer control the situation without causing unnecessary harm to the subjects in a manner which ensures his own safety.

The Canadian Tactical training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to worldwide training of peace and law enforcement officers, as well as all other professionals involved in the fields of security, investigation, protection and the maintenance of order.

The Academy also provides tailored security and safety oriented civilian training at both the individual and corporate levels.

Training courses can be customized according to specific needs.

Follow us on TWITTER @ CTTAGLOBAL

Our FACEBOOK page is “The Canadian Tactical Training Academy”

www.ctta-global.com

Special Announcement! Our Annual Special Weapons And Tactics Course is Here! – (June 25-29, 2013)

CTTA SWAT

 

Course Description:

Weapons Manipulation and Threat Response Course

This course provides individuals with instruction in various specialized tactical operational techniques designed for use in crisis, life endangering emergency situations which often involve armed confrontation. The course will cover multiple types and appropriate application of weapons including empty hands, edged weapons and firearms.

 

Course Objective:

  • To prepare individuals to evaluate, react to and control emergency situations of a critical or
    unusual nature.
  • To develop self-reliance, self-confidence, and awareness of ones physical limitations and
    provide tools and options to solve use of force problems.
  • To develop practical skills for use in high risk situations with emphasis on different types of
    weapons.
  • To develop familiarity and proficiency with firearms and non-lethal methods of control.

 

Course Content:

  • Physical Training (Individual Student Evaluation)
  • Individual and Team Equipment
  • Individual and Team Movement
  • Tactical Firearms Training
  • Responses to High Risk Situations

1)    Empty hand
2)    Edged weapons
3)    Firearms
4)    Other options

  • Building Entry, Movement, and Search Techniques
  • Critical Problem Exercise

 

INFORMATION

Dates: (June 25-29, 2013)
Hours: 09:00-17:00
Tuition: $1200 CAD

Space is limited! Register today by calling (514) 373-8411

 

*Cette formation est offerte en anglais. This course is offered in English.

Loaded Gun Slips Through Security Screening

Airport security officials at Los Angeles International Airport failed to detect a loaded handgun that was contained in a traveler’s checked bag Sunday, according to several law enforcement sources.

An airport ramp crew discovered the loaded .38-caliber handgun Sunday after it tumbled from an unzipped compartment in a duffel bag they were loading onto Alaska Airlines Flight 563, according to the sources. The aircraft was leaving the terminal at LAX at 8:15 a.m. Sunday, bound for Portland, Ore.

Workers called Los Angeles Airport Police to report the discovery. The owner of the gun was questioned at the LAPD’s Pacific station and released and allowed to board a later flight to Portland. The gun was turned over to Los Angeles police, the source said.

 

The law enforcement sources declined to speak for attribution on the case, saying they were not authorized to speak for their departments.

A TSA spokeswoman said she was unfamiliar with the incident, but was seeking details and would comment later in the day.

TSA spokeswoman Lorie Dankers said the TSA had screened the bag for explosives and there were none.

“It’s the airline and passenger’s responsibility to ensure that firearms are transported correctly,” she said. Dankers noted that since the firearm was in a checked bag, the passenger would not have had access to it on the flight].

According to the law enforcement sources, the traveler had not given the airline required notification that he was traveling with a gun in his checked bag on the trip from Los Angeles to Portland.

The traveler told authorities that he had flown out of Portland with the same bag, with the gun inside, three days earlier. It was not immediately clear whether he had notified the airline about the gun when he flew out of Portland.

Marshall McClain, president of the union representing Los Angeles Airport Police, said the incident showed that the Transportation Safety Administration had not focused on its core mission, to thoroughly screen passengers, while expending too much effort on duties that police perform.

“TSA must do their primary mission and do it well,” McClain said. “Local law enforcement needs to know that TSA is doing their part and not continuously trying to duplicate the law enforcement side of the airport screening program while their primary mission suffers.”

 

About the Canadian Tactical Training Academy

Security forces play a very important role in emergency management as well as in the daily operations of any airport and/or airline.  A safety department’s ability to successfully deal with a crisis situation depend directly upon the preparedness of its officers.  In this day and age, the field of airport and airline security is considered to be a specialization for which officers must combine both proper training and pertinent experience.  Although some officers represent private entities, generally this is a service carried out under the supervision of a government entity.  This training offers the participant the opportunity of acquiring the fundamental notions and necessary instruction from experts in the fields of Airport and Airline Protection, having operated both locally and internationally.

The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to the training of law enforcement, security, investigation, protection officers, and all those who dedicate themselves to maintaining peace.

CTTA Training Programs include but are not limited to:

Airport Security Operations:

-       ICAO and IATA security standards

-       Perimeter protection and access control

-       Protecting public areas (parking, ticket counters, restaurant, shops, restrooms, etc.)

-       Protecting restricted areas (lounges, restaurants, duty-free shops, restrooms, etc.)

-       Vehicle and pedestrian patrols, (public and restricted areas)

Airline Security Operations:

-       ICAO and IATA security standards

-       Passenger profiling

-       Passenger and employee screening

-       Dealing with unruly passengers

-       Cargo, courier and mail security

Training courses can be customized according to specific needs.

Follow us on TWITTER @ CTTAGLOBAL

Our FACEBOOK page is “The Canadian Tactical Training Academy”

U.S. Top Threat, According to Military Official

WASHINGTON – Iran is the biggest threat to the United States and its allies in the Middle East, surpassing al-Qaida, which is down but not out, a senior U.S. military official said on Friday.

“The biggest threat to the United States and to our interests and to our friends, I might add, has come into focus and it’s Iran,” said the official, addressing a forum in Washington.

Reporters were allowed to cover the event on condition that the military official not be identified.

Next week, the International Atomic Energy Agency, the United Nations nuclear watchdog, is expected to release a report that includes evidence of Iranian nuclear research which makes little sense if not weapons related, Western diplomats said.

The official said he did not believe Iran wanted to provoke a conflict and added he did not know if the Islamic state had decided to build a nuclear weapon.

Iran says its nuclear program is peaceful and that it is enriching uranium to power reactors for electricity generation.

“I don’t know that the Iranians have made the decision to make a nuclear weapon,” the official said.

He however added the international community had united against Tehran’s nuclear ambitions because of the uncertainty over Iran’s future course of action.

CTTA Teaches Counter-Terrorism Seminars

According to the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), TERRORISM is the unlawful use of force or violence against person or property to intimidate or coerce a government, the civilian population or any segment there-of, in furtherance of political or social objectives.

The Counter-Terrorism seminars offer participants both general and more specific views on modern-day terrorism.  The objective is to shed light on terrorist groups and their methods and philosophies, so that Security and Law Enforcement professionals may identify the potential components and motivations at the source of a criminal act, and establish a concrete comparative between terrorist ideologies and preventative and protective measures within a given environment.  Participants will be better prepared to analyze the present risks within a given work environment and propose the appropriate defensive measures.

Participants will acquire skills involving but not restricted to;

  • Definition and history of terrorism
  • Understanding terrorism
  • Terrorist groups and their signatures
  • Local, national, and international terrorism
  • Psychological tools of the trade
  • Operational tools of the trade
  • Government legislation and terrorism
  • Terrorism and associated threats
  • Modern-day tendencies
  • Societal consequences of terrorism
  • External influences on terrorism
  • Statistical case studies
  • Territorial protection and the importance of ports of entry (air, maritime, land, railroad)
  • Threat assessment in regards to terrorism (specific operational environments)
  • Implementation of the necessary counter measures

The Canadian Tactical training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to worldwide training of peace and law enforcement officers, as well as all other professionals involved in the fields of security, investigation, protection and the maintenance of order.

The Academy also provides tailored security and safety oriented civilian training at both the individual and corporate levels.

Training courses can be customized according to specific needs.

Follow us on TWITTER @ CTTAGLOBAL

Our FACEBOOK page is “The Canadian Tactical Training Academy”

www.ctta-global.com

Police & Military Move in to Secure Brazilian Slums

RIO DE JANEIRO — About 3,000 police officers and soldiers moved into one of the largest slums here on Sunday in a pivotal effort by the government to assert control over lawless areas of the city ahead of the 2014 World Cup and 2016 Summer Olympics.

The military presence included armored carriers. In an operation that began before dawn, military helicopters buzzed the sky, and tanks rolled through the narrow streets of the Rocinha slum. Elite police squads patrolled the alleys, and snipers perched on rooftops.

The authorities said the occupation was an effort at the “pacification” of the sprawling slum, or favela, and it was carried out peacefully. By early Sunday evening, the police, accompanied by contingents from the Brazilian Army and Navy, had not fired a shot.

Under the government plan to assert control over the favelas in Rio, the authorities have brought in specially trained community police officers and have tried to improve basic services. But the process has not always gone smoothly. Street battles last year in the Complexo do Alemão, a patchwork of slums, left more than 30 people dead before security forces won control of the area.

The operation in Rocinha — which is located above some of Rio’s most exclusive residential neighborhoods — was considered the most important step yet in the effort to impose order.

Officials said the operation’s success was made possible by months of intelligence gathering and by the arrest last week of Antônio Bonfim Lopes, the drug lord known as Nem, who was said to have effectively ruled Rocinha.

“Some say it’s good; others say it’s not,” said Nilson Ferreira, 31, a doorman who lives in Vidigal, a slum near Rocinha that was also occupied on Sunday by soldiers and the police. “For me, it’s fine,” said Mr. Ferreira, who watched the police clean an area where drug traffickers had thrown oil to prevent vehicles from passing.

The occupation of Rocinha and Vidigal, which command spectacular views of Rio, is also a crucial phase in the crackdown against drug traffickers that control many of the city’s slums.

The preparations to enter Rocinha, a hillside community of more than 80,000 people that has a thriving assortment of businesses and an emerging tourism trade, involved months of planning, officials said.

Critics said the operation, called “Shock of Peace,” seemed somewhat overdone, given the relative calm in Rocinha compared with the atmosphere in other favelas in Rio, a city with a population of 11.8 million.

“The helicopters flying overheard are more Coppola than Vietnam,” said Luiz Eduardo Soares, a security expert and author, in a Twitter message that referred to the movie “Apocalypse Now,” the director Francis Ford Coppola’s fictional account of the Vietnam War. Mr. Soares also criticized the news media frenzy ahead of the operation, saying that it fed the middle class’s exaggerated fears.

Still, the operation allowed officials to highlight the security gains of recent years, which have made parts of the city considerably safer. Rio’s security chief, José Mariano Beltrame, said on television that the Rocinha operation had returned “dignity and territory to those who haven’t had them for 30 years.”

Searches by the police in the Laboriaux area of Rocinha turned up drugs and caches of weapons and ammunition. The police also guided journalists through the luxurious three-story villa of a Rocinha drug trafficker called Peixe, or Fish, who was arrested last week, showing them his hot tub, swimming pool and collection of imported spirits.

But such displays belied the sense of normalcy that prevailed in Rocinha on Sunday. With the authorities surveying the scene from helicopters, residents gathered to chat while sharing tall bottles of beer. The wheels of commerce also began turning as they had before the incursion.

“Sign up right now,” the vendors for a satellite television service called out to residents. “When there is an operation,” a salesman, Ronaldo Oliveira, 46, said, “there is greater demand.”

 

 

About the Canadian Tactical Training Academy

The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) was the featured company in a recent trade mission to Brazil sponsored by the province of Quebec.

The trade mission took place from August 29 until September 2, and included visits to Sao Paulo and Brasilia.  Angelo Marino, VP of Operations of CTTA represented the company.

CTTA met with the Canadian Vice Consul and Trade Commissioner in Sao Paulo as well as the regional Manager for the Canadian Export Development Corporation.

CTTA participated in many discussions regarding Risk Management and intends to negotiate consulting contracts to provide services based on its extensive expertise and experience in this sector of the security industry.

Going forward, CTTA will follow up specific requests by providing additional information to various companies and agencies.

During the next few years Brazil will spend more than $1 Billion on all aspects of public security as it prepares to host many very important international events.  Security expenditures will include training, risk assessment consulting, and surveillance devices for all level of the military, police, and events security.

Brazil normally attracts 5 million tourists per year who spend more than $6 Billion.  These numbers are expected to rise sharply over the next years.

The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to the training of law enforcement, security, investigation, protection officers, and all those who dedicate themselves to maintaining peace.

CTTA offers applied security devices for surveillance and counter-surveillance activities as well as consulting services related to security risk assessments.

The Canadian Tactical training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to worldwide training of peace and law enforcement officers, as well as all other professionals involved in the fields of security, investigation, protection and the maintenance of order.

The Academy also provides tailored security and safety oriented civilian training at both the individual and corporate levels.

Training courses can be customized according to specific needs.

Follow us on TWITTER @ CTTAGLOBAL

Our FACEBOOK page is “The Canadian Tactical Training Academy”

Occupy Protests & Officer Tactics

Reporting from San Francisco, Los Angeles and New York — Police efforts to break up Occupy encampments in Northern California and elsewhere have led to investigations, apologies and lawsuits. And now the soul-searching: Why did some officers use what is being described as excessive force, wielding batons and pepper spray, against apparently peaceful protesters?

The tough response to the 2-month-old movement of civil disobedience — particularly in Oakland and on campuses in Berkeley and Davis — is an outgrowth, some say, of factors that include the spontaneous nature of the Occupy protests and two post-9/11 trends: a heightened police sensitivity to threats and a more militaristic approach to police work.

Former Seattle Police Chief Norm Stamper, who presided over the chaotic and violent response to the World Trade Organization protests in his city in 1999, faults what he calls the militarization of police forces across America in the last 10 years for the heavy-handed crackdowns on Occupy protesters.

“Everyday policing is characterized by a SWAT mentality, every other 911 call a military mission,” Stamper wrote recently in The Nation. “What emerges is a picture of a vital public-safety institution perpetually at war with its own people.”

Others see the very nature of the movement — leaderless and spontaneous — as stymieing police departments that have been well-trained in responding to more traditional forms of protest, particularly in New York City, the birthplace of Occupy Wall Street.

Jon Shane, a professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice who specializes in police policy, said New York cops are well-trained to handle planned occurrences but have struggled with “the unique challenge of a rapidly evolving situation.”

With Occupy Wall Street, “you don’t know if half the group is going to Wall Street or the other half goes to Times Square,” said Shane, who is a retired Newark, N.J., police captain. “That’s part of the tactics covered under riot control. You have to have a cadre of people ready to move rapidly.”

The most vilified police responses to Occupy protests all happened in Northern California, a region with a long history of civic demonstrations and law enforcement agencies accustomed to civil disobedience.

Two of those were on University of California campuses — Friday’s pepper-spraying of seated students at UC Davis and the wielding of batons against protesters, including former poet laureate Robert Haas, at UC Berkeley on Nov. 9.

UC President Mark G. Yudof this week launched an investigation into the Davis incident, which will be headed by former Los Angeles Police Chief William J. Bratton, and a review of police policies in handling student protests at all 10 UC campuses.

The varied responses to Occupy encampments have highlighted vastly different policing practices across the country — and even within the UC system.

Although all UC police departments’ 300 or so sworn officers operate under an 86-page, systemwide guideline, officials at each campus have wide discretion, particularly in adapting use-of-force policies. For example, said UC spokeswoman Dianne Klein, departments at UC San Francisco, UC Santa Cruz and UCLA do not use Tasers, but other departments do.

“UCSF has a six-level continuum” in addressing protesters, Klein said. Level 1 involves “mere presence, show and look mean,” she explained. “Six is deadly force. Pepper spray and batons are Level 5.

“Again, it’s not a stair-step, where each must be applied before you go to the next…. Escalation is based on sound judgment.”

At UC Berkeley, Police Chief Mitch Celaya has not authorized the use of large pepper spray canisters like the ones used against students at Davis, said Capt. Margo Bennett. “It is just something we would rather not use on our campus.”

Although officers carry small canisters on their utility belts, Bennett said, it is “not intended for primary use in dispersing crowds.”


The incident at Berkeley is under review, Bennett said, declining to discuss specifics. But officers used their batons because “the crowd behavior at that moment was not a simple peaceful linking of arms. It was active resistance, where the crowd was pushing against police and acting in a non-peaceful manner.”

CTTA OFFERS COURSES IN LESS THAN-LETHAL CONTROL TECHNIQUES

Among the many courses which CTTA provides worldwide is the Rapid Integrated Survival Kombat System – Defensive Tactics (RISK DT). This three level course is scheduled monthly at CTTA’s Montreal training facility but it is delivered to larger training groups in the United States on a regular basis.

Hundreds of law enforcement professionals have been trained in the RISK Defensive Tactics System.

Each level of the RISK Defensive Tactics course is 16 hours and there are now seven instructors in the USA who have been certified by CTTA Master Instructors. Upon the successful completion of the course CTTA will issue a certificate to each participant.

The RISK System is a highly effective combat system specifically developed for law enforcement and security professionals. Based on human anatomy and biomechanics, its effectiveness is due to the simplicity of both instinctive as well as learned techniques.

The objective of the RISK Defensive Tactics System is to train the participant in the various aspects of physical confrontation so that he can better defend himself in dealing with different types of aggressors, who may be armed or unarmed, and restrain an uncooperative individual while performing an arrest.

This system prides itself in the effective use of recognized “Use of Force Continuums” in order to avoid unnecessary liability issues for both the officer and the department alike.

Some of the skills which participants will acquire are the following:

• Defense against strikes
• Efficient striking techniques
• Restraint techniques
• Ground control and handcuffing
• Ground defense
• Defense against edged weapons
• Handgun and long gun disarming
• Intervention in confined areas

Training courses can be customized according to specific needs.

Follow us on TWITTER @ CTTAGLOBAL

Our FACEBOOK page is “The Canadian Tactical Training Academy”

www.ctta-global.com

 

 

CTTA To Give RISK DT Intro Course at 2012 Blue Line Trade Show

The Canadian Tactical Training Academy will be giving a 1-day RISK DT (Rapid Integrated Survival Kombat – Defensive Tactics) course at the 2012 Blue Line Trade Show.

RISK Defensive Tactics is an easy-to-learn and effective intervention system for Police, Corrections and Security forces.

The RISK System (Rapid Integrated Survival Kombat – Defensive Tactics) was developed by Law Enforcement personnel for Law Enforcement personnel.

RISK Defensive Tactics is an easy-to-learn and effective intervention system for police, corrections and security forces, that integrates natural reactions with the most effective defensive tactics and control techniques available today. Finding a suitable defensive tactics system that complies with proper use-of-force guidelines and still remains effective has been challenging, until now.

RISK DT offers a system that is use-of-force compliant and is effective at controlling noncompliant and aggressive suspects quickly and easily.

 

To registre for this event, please visit the Blueline registration page: (Please note this course is restricted to Law Enforcement, First Responders, Corrections, Military & Security Personnel)

http://blueline.ca/tradeshow/courses/10/


 

Man Dies After Being Hit by Stun Gun

January 16, 2012 – Authorities in San Bernardino County were investigating the death of a 43-year-old man who died in police custody shortly after a stun gun was used on him during his arrest.

Officers with the Colton Police Department responded to the scene of a “disturbance” report in the 1100 block of South Mohave Dr. in Colton around 5 p.m. Saturday.

Hutalio Serrano, of Colton, allegedly refused to follow an officer’s commands and “actively resisted” the officer, according to a statement from the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department, which is investigating the death.

An officer then deployed “an electronic control device” on the man, but the measure was ineffective. Three officers managed to handcuff Serrano, but the 260-pound man continued to resist, authorities said.

Shortly after being taken into custody, Serrano suffered a medical emergency and was taken to Loma Linda University Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead at 6:23 p.m.

Authorities said an autopsy will be performed later this week to determine a cause of death.

 

CTTA OFFERS COURSES IN LESS-THAN-LETHAL CONTROL TECHNIQUUES

Among the many courses which CTTA provides worldwide, is the Rapid Integrated Survival Kombat System. This three level course is scheduled monthly at CTTA’s Montreal training facility but it is delivered to larger training groups in the United States on a regular basis.

Hundreds of  law enforcement professionals have been trained in the R.I.S.K. Defensive Tactics System.

Each level of the R.I.S.K. Defensive Tactics course is 16 hours and there are now seven instructors in the USA who have been certified by CTTA Master Instructors. Upon the successful completion of the course CTTA will issue a certificate to each participant.

The R.I.S.K. System is a highly effective combat system specifically developed for law enforcement and security professionals. Based on human anatomy and biomechanics, its effectiveness is due to the simplicity of both instinctive as well as learned techniques.

The objective of the R.I.S.K. Defensive Tactics System is to train the participant in the various aspects of physical confrontation so that he can better defend himself in dealing with different types of aggressors, who may be armed or unarmed, and restrain an uncooperative individual while performing an arrest.

This system prides itself in the effective use of recognized “Use of Force Continuums” in order to avoid unnecessary liability issues for both the officer and the department alike.

 

 

Some of the skills which participants will acquire are the following:

• Defense against strikes
• Efficient striking techniques
• Restraint techniques
• Ground control and handcuffing
• Ground defense
• Defense against edged weapons
• Handgun and long gun disarming
• Intervention in confined areas

Training courses can be customized according to specific needs.

Follow us on TWITTER @ CTTAGLOBAL

Our FACEBOOK page is “The Canadian Tactical Training Academy”

www.ctta-global.com

Militants Launch Attack on U.S. Embassy in Kabul

www.nytimes.com

By ALISSA J. RUBIN and JACK HEALY

Published: September 13, 2011

KABUL, Afghanistan — Insurgents launched a complex assault against the American Embassy and the nearby NATO headquarters on Tuesday, pelting the heavily guarded compounds with rockets in an attack that raised new questions about the security of Afghanistan’s capital and the Westerners working there.

At least 10 explosions — apparently from rockets launched by militants — and waves of automatic weapons fire were reported amid the drone of sirens and English-language warnings telling Americans inside the embassy to take cover.

Sediq Sediqi, spokesman for the Interior Ministry, said that two attackers had been killed, as had one policeman. At about 4 p.m. local time, three attackers were believed to be still fighting. Kerri Hannan, a spokeswoman for the American Embassy, said that no embassy personnel had been hurt.

It was unclear precisely how many assailants were behind the assault or whether they were attacking from a single or multiple locations. The attackers were holed up on several floors of a tall, partly built concrete building that offered a bird’s-eye view of the secured diplomatic and military compounds about a half mile away. Flashes from gun barrels could be seen as the militants fired from their perch. Afghan security forces returned fire from the ground, sending puffs of concrete dust into the air as bullets slapped the building.

“We don’t know how many suicide bombers are in the building,” said Col. Abdul Zahir, of the criminal investigative division of the Kabul police. “They’re shooting at the embassy. We’re still in fighting position. We can’t say anything.”

Two explosions were also reported near the Afghan Parliament, but it was unclear whether militants were specifically trying to attack the government building or other targets.

The embassy assault, which began around 1:15 p.m., was the latest in a string of attacks that have chipped away at a tenuous sense of security in the capital. In August, militants killed eight people in an attack on a British cultural center, and in June, nine suicide bombers breached layers of security to attack the hillside Intercontinental Hotel.

By 3:10 p.m., two Blackhawk helicopters circled the building, but did not immediately open fire.

The streets surrounding the site of the attack, normally choked with the traffic of minibuses, bicycles and Toyotas, were deserted on Monday afternoon of all but security forces and people racing for cover.

“We don’t know what’s happening,” one Afghan soldier said. “Everywhere you can hear shooting.”

Zabiullah Mujahid, a Taliban spokesman, claimed responsibility for the attack in a text message, saying the Taliban had set out to attack the embassy, a NATO base and Afghan government buildings. His claim could not be immediately confirmed.

The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force confirmed there were continuing attacks against the embassy and ISAF headquarters, and said in a Twitter message there were “forces responding quickly,” but provided no other details. The attack came less than two months after Afghan forces assumed formal responsibility for security in the capital, one of several corners of the country where security was officially handed over in July.

Sharifullah Sahak and Ray Rivera contributed reporting.

Navy SEAL raid shows US leaner way ahead

Kimberly Dozier and Robert Burns

January 27, 2012 – 4:49AM - AP

The Navy SEAL operation that freed two hostages in Somalia is representative of the Obama administration’s pledge to build a smaller, more agile military force that can carry out surgical counterterrorist strikes to cripple an enemy.

 

That is a strategy much preferred to the land invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan that have cost so much American blood and treasure over the past decade. The contrast to a full-bore invasion is stark: A small, daring team storms a pirate encampment on a near-moonless night, kills nine kidnappers and whisks the hostages to safety.

Special operations forces, trained for such clandestine missions, have become a more prominent tool in the military’s kit since the September 11, 2001, attacks that led to the ongoing war in Afghanistan. The administration is expected to announce on Thursday that it will invest even more heavily in that capability in coming years.

The SEAL Team 6 raid in Somalia, which followed the operation in May last year that killed al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, has political dimensions in an election year.

It gave an added punch to the five-state tour President Barack Obama began the day after he delivered his State of the Union speech. Obama did not mention the raid that was unfolding during his Tuesday night address, but he dropped a hint upon arriving in the House chamber by telling Defense Secretary Leon Panetta: “Good job tonight.”

The SEAL mission also helps soften the blow of defence cuts the White House is seeking in spite of a chorus of criticism by hawkish lawmakers.

Not to be discounted is the feel-good moment such missions give the American public, a counterbalance to the continued casualties in Afghanistan.

Obama sent a letter to congressional leaders on Thursday outlining the reasons for the raid and declaring that his order to use force to rescue the hostages was in line with his constitutional powers as commander-in-chief of the armed forces. He wrote that the kidnappers were “linked to” Somali pirates and financiers.

After planning and rehearsal, the Somalia rescue was carried out by SEAL Team 6, officially known as the Naval Special Warfare Development Group (DEVGRU). It was not clear whether any team members participated in both the raid in Somalia and the bin Laden mission in Pakistan.

The SEALs parachuted from US Air Force special operations aircraft before moving on foot, apparently undetected, to the outdoor encampment, two officials said. They found American Jessica Buchanan, 32, and Poul Hagen Thisted, a 60-year-old Dane, who had been kidnapped in Somalia in late 2011.

The SEALs encountered little resistance from the kidnappers during the operation, which lasted about an hour to an hour and a half, two US officials said. Only one of the attackers fired back and was quickly subdued, one official said. The rest were believed killed, although officials did not rule out the possibility of an escape, as aerial surveillance of the scene was hampered on the cloudy, dark night.

Army special operations MH-60 Black Hawk helicopters then swooped into the subdued encampment near the town of Adado to carry away the SEALs and hostages.

The captors were heavily armed and had explosives nearby when the rescuers arrived on the scene, Pentagon press secretary George Little said, but he was not more specific. Little declined to say whether there was an exchange of gunfire and would not provide further details about the rescue beyond saying that all of the captors were killed by the Americans.

A US defence official said on Thursday Buchanan and Thisted had been flown to Naval Air Station Sigonella, on the Italian island of Sicily, for medical screenings and other evaluations before heading home.

Buchanan’s family is meeting her at NAS Sigonella, which is the hub of US Navy air operations in the Mediterranean and hosts an Italian air force base.

Medal of Honor for Marine

www.washingtonpost.com

By Associated Press, Published: September 14 | Updated: Thursday, September 15, 6:09 AM

Memorials to coincide with Medal of Honor ceremony for former Marine who saved 36 lives

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Dakota Meyer saved 36 lives from an ambush in Afghanistan and the former Marine will collect the nation’s highest military honor at the White House on Thursday. While he is receiving the Medal of Honor, Meyer’s slain comrades will be memorialized in hometown ceremonies at his request.

His hero’s moment was his darkest day. Meyer lost some of his best friends the morning of Sept. 8, 2009, in far-off Kunar

           

 

(Associated Press ) – In this undated photo released by the U.S. Marines, Sgt. Dakota Meyer poses for a photo while deployed in support of Operation Enduring Freedom in Ganjgal Village, Kunar province, Afghanistan. The White House announced the 23-year-old Marine scout sniper from Columbia, Ky., who has since left the Marine Corps, will become the first living Marine to be awarded the Medal of Honor in decades for his actions in Afghanistan.

 

 

“It’s hard, it’s … you know … getting recognized for the worst day of your life, so it’s… it’s a really tough thing,” Meyer said, struggling for words.

Meyer charged through heavy insurgent gunfire on five death-defying trips in an armored Humvee to save 13 Marines and Army soldiers and another 23 Afghan troops pinned down by withering enemy fire. Meyer personally killed at least eight insurgents despite taking a shrapnel wound to one arm as he manned the gun turret of the Humvee and provided covering fire for the soldiers, according to the military.

President Barack Obama will bestow the medal at a White House ceremony. The two have also met privately, having a beer on a patio outside the Oval Office on Wednesday.

“Over the weekend, the President’s staff called Meyer in preparation for Thursday’s Medal of Honor ceremony at the White House. Meyer asked the staffer if he could have a beer with the President. POTUS invited Dakota to come by the White House this afternoon,” spokesman Jay Carney tweeted.

In Afghanistan, Meyer was part of a security team supporting a patrol moving into a village in the Ganjgal Valley on the day of the ambush.

Meyer and the other Americans had gone to the area to train Afghan military members when, suddenly, the village lights went out and gunfire erupted. About 50 Taliban insurgents on mountainsides and in the village had ambushed the patrol.

As the forward team took fire and called for air support that wasn’t coming, Meyer, a corporal at the time, begged his command to let him head into the incoming fire to help.

Four times he was denied his request before Meyer and another Marine, Staff Sgt. Juan Rodriguez-Chavez, jumped into the Humvee and headed into the fray. For his valor, Rodriguez-Chavez, a 34-year-old who hailed originally from Acuna, Mexico, would be awarded the Navy Cross.

“They told him he couldn’t go in,” said Dwight Meyer, Dakota Meyer’s 81-year-old grandfather, a former Marine who served in the 1950s. “He told them, ‘The hell I’m not,’ and he went in. It’s a one-in-a-million thing” that he survived.

With Meyer manning the Humvee’s gun turret, the two drew heavy fire. But they began evacuating wounded Marines and American and Afghan soldiers to a safe point. Meyer made five trips into the kill zone, each time searching for the forward patrol with his Marine friends — including 1st Lt. Michael Johnson — whom Meyer had heard yelling on the radio for air support.

With Meyer and Rodriguez-Chavez ready to test fate a fifth time in the kill zone, a UH-60 helicopter arrived at last to provide overhead support. Troops aboard the chopper told Meyer they had spotted what appeared to be four bodies. Meyer knew those were his friends and he had to bring them out.

“It might sound crazy, but it was just, you don’t really think about it, you don’t comprehend it, you don’t really comprehend what you did until looking back on it,” Meyer said.

Wounded and tired, Meyer left the relative safety of the Humvee and ran out on foot.

“He just really took a chance,” Dwight Meyer said.

Ducking around buildings to avoid heavy gunfire, he reached the bodies of Johnson, a 25-year-old from Virginia Beach; Staff Sgt. Aaron Kenefick, 30, of Roswell, Ga.; Corpsman James Layton, 22, of Riverbank, Calif.; and Edwin Wayne Johnson Jr., a 31-year-old gunnery sergeant from Columbus, Ga.

Meyer and two other soldiers dodged bullets and rocket-propelled grenades to pull the bodies out of a ditch where the men had died while trying to take cover.

The deaths of Meyer’s comrades prompted an investigation into events that day, and two Army officers were later reprimanded for being “inadequate and ineffective” and for “contributing directly to the loss of life.” Along with Meyer’s friends, a fifth American — Army Sgt. Kenneth W. Westbrook, 41, of Shiprock, N.M. — was fatally wounded in the ambush.

Meyer said he’ll be humbled by the memory of his fallen comrades as he receives the award Thursday. One of the memorials will be at a Columbus cemetery for gunnery sergeant Johnson, a father of three who served nearly 13 years in the U.S. Marine Corps.

Will Duke, one of the organizers, said the memorials spoke volumes about Meyer.

“I can tell by his actions, not only the actions he took in earning the Medal of Honor in Afghanistan but also the actions he is taking now. Essentially by requesting these memorial services for his fallen comrades, he’s saying this is about them,” Duke said.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Expanding Business Demands in the Security Industry

MEXICO CITY — With the Iraq war over and the American presence waning in Afghanistan, U.S. security contractors are looking for new prospects in Mexico, where spreading criminal violence has created a growing demand for battle-ready professionals.
After years of lucrative work in the Middle East and Central Asia, where their presence has been occasionally marred by incidents of excessive force and misconduct, contractors and private security firms of varying sizes and specialties are being drawn into a battle closer to home. But Mexico’s restrictive gun laws mean that foreign contractors must enter the bloody drug war unarmed as they take jobs ranging from consulting and technical training for the Mexican military to guarding business executives from kidnapping gangs and extortionists.
Nov. 16, 2011: An estimated 17 tons of marijuana were seized when authorities discovered a major cross-border drug tunnel between San Diego and Tijuana, Mexico.
The companies are beckoned by swelling pots of public and private contracting gold. In November, the Pentagon’s counter-narco-terrorism program office solicited bids on more than $3 billion in contracts worldwide, with an unspecified amount destined for operations in Mexico. The State Department has pledged nearly $2 billion in drug war aid to Mexico since 2008, much of it available to U.S. companies that can provide equipment or services to the embattled Mexican state.
Security spending by private companies in Mexico and the Mexican government has also surged. Since President Felipe Calderon deployed Mexico’s military against the country’s drug kingpins in December 2006, the number of armed private security firms in the country has doubled, Mexican federal police statistics show. But while there are 1,400 licensed firms in good standing, analysts say there may be another 10,000 operating without proper authorization.
Still, despite Mexico’s potential for highly remunerative work, experts caution that it will never equal the bonanza that U.S. companies found in Iraq and Afghanistan.
For one, the money available in Mexico doesn’t measure up to the cash that flowed through the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, where the U.S. government spent more than $200 billion on private contractors over the past decade.
About the Canadian Tactical Training Academy
The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to the training of law enforcement, security, investigation, protection officers, and all those who dedicate themselves to maintaining peace.
CTTA offers applied security devices for surveillance and counter-surveillance activities as well as consulting services related to security risk assessments.
The Canadian Tactical training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to worldwide training of peace and law enforcement officers, as well as all other professionals involved in the fields of security, investigation, protection and the maintenance of order.

The Academy also provides tailored security and safety oriented civilian training at both the individual and corporate levels.

 Training courses can be customized according to specific needs.
 Follow us on TWITTER @ CTTAGLOBAL
 Our FACEBOOK page is “The Canadian Tactical Training Academy”

Gun On Plane – Error Not Terror

CTV News

Aaron Haight, a licensed owner of a Glock 22 and Baby Eagle 941, had no business boarding with his firearms and he knew it. What he couldn’t figure out was why everyone else seemed to think it was OK for his pistols to be in the cabin with him.

It’s a story that starts early, 4:30am on June 14th, 2011. Aaron’s sleepy, and needs to fill out a form in order to bring his firearms with him from Vancouver to Collingwood, Ont. for a shooting competition.

 

The RCMP has given him permission to travel with the weapons; he asks the Air Canada customer service agent for the form. The white paper he’s handed doesn’t look familiar, but he’s told to fill it out. So he does.

Not once was he asked for a badge. Not once did he say he was a police officer. Nonetheless he’s given police paperwork, on which he indicates the RCMP has authorized the travel. Those four little letters were enough to have him arrested upon landing in Toronto.

 

 

We can debate back and forth about whether he made a mistake. There’s not much question that he shouldn’t have filled out that form. But as a passenger who might have been travelling on board that plane, it’s a comforting thought to know such mistakes get caught, either by the airline or the Canadian Airline Transportation Safety Authority. Prepare to get uncomfortable.

 

When Aaron told security he didn’t have a badge, they accepted his gun licence. When he questioned whether it wouldn’t be a problem to bring the guns on board he was told to hand the case to the flight attendant. Only in-flight and unable to produce a badge he never claimed to have, did the pilot sound the alarm.

 

 

 

When I asked the Peel Regional Police officers about the file they were adamant – Aaron did nothing illegal. Three hours after they arrested him, he was cleared of all charges — after the police watched video surveillance from YVR. They concluded Aaron never did anything to give the impression he was a peace officer; that he should never have been given that form. What’s more, CATSA and Air Canada both acknowledge it happened and have made changes in hopes it doesn’t happen again… as someone who travels from time to time I sure hope so too. And that if a mistake like that ever happens again, that it happens to someone like Aaron. Someone who has no intention of harming anyone, who has a great respect for firearms and who was willing to tell me the story of how his Glock 22 got on board.

The Canadian Tactical training Academy (CTTA) is a for-profit educational institution devoted to worldwide training of peace and law enforcement officers, as well as all other professionals involved in the fields of security, investigation, protection and the maintenance of order.

The Academy also provides tailored security and safety oriented civilian training at both the individual and corporate levels.

CTTA courses include Counter-Terrorism seminars, Airport and Airline Security, Physical Security and Protection of Infrastructure, among others.

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Nortel hit by suspected Chinese cyberattacks for a decade

Hackers based in China enjoyed widespread access to Nortel’s computer network for nearly a decade, according to a report.

The hackers – who appeared to be based in China – had unfettered access to the former telecommunications giant as far back as 2000, according to Brian Shields, a former Nortel employee who launched an internal investigation of the attacks, the Wall Street Journal reports.

They “had access to everything”, Shields told the Journal. “They had plenty of time. All they had to do was figure out what they wanted.”

Over the years, the hackers downloaded business plans, research and development reports, employee emails and other documents.

According to the internal report, Nortel “did nothing from a security standpoint” about the attacks.

Corporate espionage is a growing problem for North American companies, with the majority of attacks coming from China.

China rejects cyberspying allegations

Last November, a group of U.S. analysts said there were as many as 12 different Chinese groups participating in cyberattacks on U.S. companies and government agencies.

China has rejected allegations of cyberspying, saying it is also a target of attacks.

The long-term attack on Nortel isn’t the only time a Canadian company has been targeted by hackers.

During BHP Billiton’s hostile takeover bid for Saskatchewan’s PotashCorp, hackers traced to China targeted Bay Street law firms and other companies to get insider information on the $38-billion corporate takeover.

Those same hackers also targeted Canadian government computers in fall 2010, targeting the Finance Department, the Treasury Board, and Defence Research and Development Canada, a civilian agency of the Department of National Defence.

Nortel attacks went unreported

Nortel, currently selling off assets as part of a 2009 bankruptcy filing, failed to disclose the attacks to potential buyers of its patents and business units, according to the Journal.

During the investigation, the telecom giant made no effort to determine if any of its products were compromised. Nortel, as a publicly traded company, would have been required by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to disclose any “material” risks to investors.

According to Shields, Nortel discovered the hacking in 2004, and the company’s silence put acquiring companies at risk. Three former Nortel executives are currently on trial for allegedly tampering with quarterly results in order to trigger millions of dollars in bonus payments.

With files from The Associated Press

About the Canadian Tactical Training Academy
The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to the training of law enforcement, security, investigation, protection officers, and all those who dedicate themselves to maintaining peace.
CTTA offers applied security devices for surveillance and counter-surveillance activities as well as consulting services related to security risk assessments.
The Canadian Tactical training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to worldwide training of peace and law enforcement officers, as well as all other professionals involved in the fields of security, investigation, protection and the maintenance of order.The Academy also provides tailored security and safety oriented civilian training at both the individual and corporate levels.

 Training courses can be customized according to specific needs.
 Follow us on TWITTER @ CTTAGLOBAL
 Our FACEBOOK page is “The Canadian Tactical Training Academy”

Stay Sharp – Edged Weapons Still a Threat

Dave Grossi, Law Officer’s Tactics columnist

It’s been over two decades since Calibre Press, Inc. released their award-winning video “Surviving Edged Weapons.” That training video and the concepts and tactics of edged weapon defense, perhaps more than anything else, revolutionized the officer safety skills required to keep cops safe when dealing with likely knife threats. The “21-foot drill” developed by retired Salt Lake City, Utah Police Lieutenant Dennis Tueller has become a staple of edged weapon defense.

Yet, edged weapons continue to be a significant danger to today’s street cops. A study released a few years ago by the FBI reported that “edged weapons are the second leading cause of homicides in the U.S. behind handguns.” In fact, suspects continue to kill more people with knives and other edged weapons than with rifles and shotguns combined. Cops are still dying at the hands of edged weapon assailants.

Earlier this month, New Castle County, Del., Police Sergeant Joe Szczerba, age 44, an 18-year veteran, was fatally stabbed while fighting with a suspect he was trying to arrest for disorderly conduct. Details regarding the incident are still sketchy, and this article isn’t going to address the tactics surrounding that officer’s arrest attempts. But, this piece is prompted in part by that death and the fact that, in my opinion, many trainers and agencies have let their edged weapon defense training lapse over the years because of increased emphasis on active shooter training, WMD issues and other matters.

We all know training time is limited, but hopefully EW threats and the tactics needed to counter them have not fallen too far by the way side.

Dedicated to the Memory of New Castle County, Del., Police Sergeant Joe Szczerba. 

 

 

CTTA OFFERS COURSES IN LESS-THAN-LETHAL DEFENSIVE TACTICS

Among the many courses which CTTA provides worldwide is the Rapid Integrated Survival Kombat System. This three level course is offered through CTTA’s Montreal training facility as well as being is delivered to larger training groups in the United States on a regular basis.

Hundreds of  law enforcement professionals have been trained in the RISK Defensive Tactics System.

Each level of the RISK Defensive Tactics course is 16 hours and there are now seven instructors in the USA who have been certified by CTTA Master Instructors. Upon the successful completion of the course, CTTA will issue a certificate to each participant.

The RISK System is a highly effective combat system specifically developed for law enforcement and security professionals. Based on human anatomy and biomechanics, its effectiveness is due to the simplicity of both instinctive as well as learned techniques.

The objective of the R.I.S.K. Defensive Tactics System is to train the participant in the various aspects of physical confrontation so that he can better defend himself in dealing with different types of aggressors, who may be armed or unarmed, and restrain an uncooperative individual while performing an arrest.

This system prides itself in the effective use of recognized “Use of Force Continuums” in order to avoid unnecessary liability issues for both the officer and the department alike.

Some of the skills which participants will acquire are the following:

• Defense against strikes
• Efficient striking techniques
• Restraint techniques
• Ground control and handcuffing
• Ground defense
• Defense against edged weapons
• Handgun and long gun disarming
• Intervention in confined areas

Training courses can be customized according to specific needs.

Follow us on TWITTER @ CTTAGLOBAL

Our FACEBOOK page is “The Canadian Tactical Training Academy”

www.ctta-global.com

 

 

 

B.C. could lose RCMP if November deadline not met

By Katie DeRosa

VICTORIA — With negotiations over the policing contract in B.C. stalled, the federal government has given the province an ultimatum: sign a 20-year deal by November or we’ll withdraw RCMP services from the province.

B.C. Solicitor General Shirley Bond said Tuesday the federal government is effectively forcing the province to sign an inadequate “take-it-or-leave-it” deal without accountability or cost control measures.

“That ultimatum is an unfortunate development for local governments who’ve been consistently concerned about containing their escalating RCMP costs,” Bond said in a terse statement, after raising the issue at Union of B.C. Municipalities meeting in Vancouver.

Bond said negotiations are being stonewalled by the federal government, which refuses to push back the November deadline.

“I am committed to making a deal that reflects a true partnership, strengthens accountability and contains costs in specific ways — matters the federal side has been ignoring in the interest of giving us an ultimatum,” Bond said.

The province and the federal government have been negotiating over the last four years for a new RCMP contract. The current one expires March 2012.

Bond said she was disappointed when, in the last month, Alberta and Saskatchewan broke away from negotiations by a block of provinces and inked 20-year deals with the RCMP.

“We still believe, fundamentally, that all levels of government benefit from having a national police presence like the RCMP in community policing but I am starting to wonder whether the federal government still wants to be in contract policing,” Bond said in the statement.

The RCMP in have faced a barrage of criticism in B.C. after several high profile police shootings and deaths, included the Tasering death of Polish immigrant Robert Dziekanski in the Vancouver International Airport in October 2007.

Critics have urged the B.C. government to negotiate a five-year deal with the RCMP so that it can look at setting up a provincial force. The province also wanted the RCMP to be accountable to the Office of the Police Complaint Commissioner and the new Independent Investigations Office, which look into police misconduct and police-involved shootings or serious injuries, respectively.

The RCMP could not be reached for comment.

Victoria Times Colonist

 

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Crowd control a tricky balancing act: expert

Photograph by: (John Kenney/THE GAZETTE)

When you go up to a crowd with a shield, things can get violent quick.
Jocelyn Moisan- The Canadian Tactical Training Academy

MONTREAL – When police bring out the tear gas and flashbang grenades in a demonstration, it’s usually to avoid an even uglier situation.

So says a veteran instructor of crowd control tactics who has trained police forces in more than 20 countries.

“The idea is to break the problem right away and disperse the crowd,” said Jocelyn Moisan, president of the Canadian Tactical Training Academy, based right here in Montreal.

“When you go up to a crowd with a shield, things can get violent quick. You want to avoid that. So it’s better to use flashbangs and stop the process than make a lot of arrests. It avoids the escalation of violence.”

When Montreal riot police threw a flashbang at student protesters on Wednesday, which seriously injured the eye of student Francis Grenier, it was meant to destabilize the crowd blocking the entrance to the Loto-Québec building on Sherbrooke St., police brass said.

“It was a defensive manoeuvre that let us move on to our second action, which was to remove the barricade and advance,” chief inspector Alain Bourdage said.

What triggers a riot squad to deploy forceful tactics is a science in principle but not so much in practice, police trainers say. Every police force has its own guidelines for responding to incidents, but crowd control, at least in Canada, usually follows a logic: break it up before it snowballs into something more violent.

“When (protesters) do stupid stuff it can get ugly very fast,” Moisan said, like pushing an officer or throwing a heavy object.

“It really depends on the prevailing circumstances that can change in a heartbeat,” wrote Steve Watt, president of CMLS Global, a police training firm in Vancouver. “It may be easy to armchair-quarterback these incidents, but not so easy when you are in the middle of one and making decisions on the spot.”

Montreal cops follow a force continuum established by the provincial police school in Nicolet. If a group doesn’t respond to verbal warnings and show “active resistance” by pushing or throwing objects at regular officers, the riot squad is deployed, Bourdage said.

Their first strategy is to order an evacuation. The flashbang was thrown because protesters kept throwing things, he added.

Student leaders, however, were at a loss. When police moved in to disperse the students, they claim they were doing nothing wrong.

“This police intervention happened particularly fast and was particularly aggressive. The demonstration was calm, there was no material damage and no one had gotten hurt,” Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois, a spokesperson for student group Association pour une Solidarité Syndicale Étudiante said.

In the dozens of marches he took part in, things got ugly when the riot squad approached the demonstrators.

“In student protests, when the police keep a certain distance and respect the demonstrators, things go well. But when they get close, it’s when things go bad. It’s what happened yesterday,” he said.

Francis Dupuis-Déri, a professor of political science at UQAM, believes police don’t respond to specific actions, but to the perceived status of demonstrators. In his study of police clashes in Quebec, he noticed that riot cops are harsher with students and extreme leftists than with unionized workers.

“Police see them as second-class citizens. They’re considered troublemakers, and the repression happens much faster,” Dupuis-Déri said.

Moisan said this doesn’t surprise him. Security workers, he said, adapt their strategy to the perceived danger of the crowd.

“They’re supposed to be neutral in every case, but are they always? It’s hard to tell. If they know a group has a bad reputation, they’ll be stricter. They know some people have the tendency to go further in their actions. So they’ll jump in faster,” he said.

 

About the Canadian Tactical Training Academy
The Canadian Tactical training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to worldwide training of peace and law enforcement officers, as well as all other professionals involved in the fields of security, investigation, protection and the maintenance of order. The Academy also provides tailored security and safety oriented civilian training at both the individual and corporate levels.

Training courses can be customized according to specific needs.

Follow us on TWITTER @ CTTAGLOBAL
Our FACEBOOK page is: www.facebook.com/TacticalAcademy

Tensions Ignited by Rival Gangs Casino Shootings

KEN RITTER

With a Hells Angel dead in a northern Nevada casino shooting, two members of the rival Vagos motorcycle club wounded and a third hurt in a drive-by attack hours later, investigators were using video and witnesses Monday to identify who’s responsible for the weekend violence.

One Hells Angels member was in jail, but no arrests have been made in Friday night’s slaying of Jeffrey “Jethro” Pettigrew at John Ascuaga’s Nugget, Deputy Sparks Police Chief Brian Allen said. Pettigrew, 51, was the president of the Hells Angels chapter in San Jose, Calif., where he worked as a city heavy equipment operator.

Allen said Monday that casino surveillance video won’t be made public until investigators complete the painstaking work of identifying about 60 Vagos and 12 Hells Angels amid a crowd of several hundred people gambling and partying. Members of the crowd suddenly dove for cover when gunfire disrupted the regional Street Vibrations motorcycle rally.

“In Arizona, more than two dozen members of the rival groups were arrested in August 2010 after a shootout left five people wounded in Chino Valley, north of Prescott.

In California, an annual organized crime report from the state attorney general calls longstanding tensions between the Hells Angels and the Vagos “particularly poignant.” It cited instances in which the Hells Angels have forced Vagos out of chapters in Hells Angels hotspots.

San Jose police Sgt. Jason Dwyer downplayed the possibility of retaliatory acts in the largest city of the San Francisco Bay area.

“We are not aware of any specific threat at this time,” Dwyer said Monday. “We are not expecting any action here.”

Allen said it appeared from the videos that the Sparks shooting was spontaneous and not the result of two groups entering the 1,600-room hotel and casino girded for battle.

One witness told the Reno Gazette-Journal that a man wearing Hells Angels insignia pulled a handgun and fired after being bloodied and knocked to the floor in a fistfight.

The shooting drew a heavy response from local, state and federal law enforcers, prompting the cancellation of the weekend rally in Sparks. The mayor declared a state of emergency.

Two men identified by police as Vagos motorcycle club members from California were wounded.

The only man arrested immediately after the shooting — Cesar Villagrana, 36, a Hells Angel member from California — was being held Monday on $500,000 bail at the Washoe County jail in Reno. He faces a court appearance on felony assault with a deadly weapon and possession of a stolen firearm charges.

Sparks Mayor Geno Martini later linked a drive-by shooting Saturday morning that left a motorcyclist wounded to the deadly casino shooting less than 12 hours earlier.

 

CTTA THROUGH ITS PARTNER PALESTRA GROUP INTERNATIONAL, OFFERS ANTI-GANG AND ANTI-MOTORCYCLE GANG COURSES

These courses identify colors, monikers, hierarchy, financial activities, tattoos, coded writings, hand signs and speech as well as counter surveillance techniques used by the clubs. These courses include case studies of the clubs and their organization.

These courses are designed to give a basic working knowledge of street gangs and the ability to recognize and identify a street gang member.

 

Course List:


·      BASIC STREET GANG

·      CANADIAN STREET GANGS “Bangin Across the Border”

·      CRIMINAL PROSECUTORS – BASIC STREET GANGS

·      CHILD AND YOUTH SERVICES – BASIC GANGS

·      OUTLAW MOTORCYCLE GANGS – O.M.G

·      COMPREHENSIVE BASIC STREET GANGS

·      SCHOOL RESOURCE OFFICER – BASIC STREET GANGS

 

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CTTA Vice-President, John Farinaccio, Earns CFE Credential

AUSTIN, Texas, March 13, 2012 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) (Pink Sheets:CTTG) is pleased to announce that its Vice-President, John Farinaccio, has earned his CFE credentials.

The Association of Certified Fraud Examiners (ACFE), the world’s largest anti-fraud organization and leading provider of anti-fraud training and education, is pleased to award John Farinaccio, of Montreal, Quebec, the globally preferred Certified Fraud Examiner (CFE) credential. In order to become a CFE, Farinaccio has met a stringent set of criteria and passed a rigorous exam administered by the ACFE.

Farinaccio has successfully met the ACFE’s character, experience and education requirements for the CFE credential, and has demonstrated knowledge in four areas critical to the fight against fraud: Fraudulent Financial Transactions, Fraud Prevention and Deterrence, Legal Elements of Fraud and Fraud Investigation.

Farinaccio joins the ranks of business and government professionals worldwide who have also earned the CFE certification. Farinaccio is currently the President of Specialized Security & Investigation Services (SSIS) and Vice-President of The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

CFEs have the ability to: examine data and records to detect and trace fraudulent transactions; interview suspects to obtain information and confessions; write investigation reports; advise clients as to their findings; testify at trial; understand the law as it relates to fraud and fraud investigations; and identify the underlying factors that motivate individuals to commit fraud. CFEs on six continents have investigated more than 1 million suspected cases of civil and criminal fraud.

About the ACFE

The ACFE is the world’s largest anti-fraud organization and premier provider of anti-fraud training and education. Together with more than 60,000 members, the ACFE is reducing business fraud world-wide and inspiring public confidence in the integrity and objectivity within the profession. Identified as “the premier financial sleuthing organization” by The Wall Street Journal, the ACFE has captured national and international media attention. For more information about the ACFE visit ACFE.com.

Globally preferred by employers, the Certified Fraud Examiner (CFE) credential denotes proven expertise in fraud prevention, detection, deterrence and investigation. Read more about the CFE credential on the ACFE’s website, ACFE.com

About The Canadian Tactical Training Academy

The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to the training of law enforcement, security, investigation, protection officers and all those who dedicate themselves to maintaining peace.

CTTA offers applied security devices for surveillance and counter-surveillance activities as well as consulting services related to security risk assessments.

India To Help Train Afghan Security Forces

CNN

India will help train Afghan security forces under a deal signed by Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Afghan President Hamid Karzai, according to a copy of the agreement released by India.

The two nations agreed on a wide range of political, trade and person-to-person links under the strategic partnership deal signed Tuesday.

The agreement comes at a time of increasing tension between Afghanistan and Pakistan, India’s fiercest regional rival.

Pakistani Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani on Wednesday downplayed the significance of the agreement.

“It does not make a difference to Pakistan, nor does it cause Pakistan any harm,” he said on GEO TV.

But Kanwal Sibal, a former Indian foreign secretary, laid out the regional tensions to CNN on Wednesday.

“Pakistan continues to press the international community to reduce India’s role in Afghanistan, but that position has been effectively rejected by the United States,” he said at a conference on the region in London.

“Pakistan cannot have a veto over the right of a sovereign, independent Afghan government to have a relationship with India,” he said.

But, he added: “We have no interest in getting involved in the military situation in Afghanistan, so Pakistan has no reason to worry.”

One expert on the region refused to predict what effect the deal would have.

“South Asia is a paradox. There are no consistencies in relationships between countries,” said Sajjan Gohel, director for international security at the Asia-Pacific Foundation. “What may be the current understanding could well be very different in six months’ time.”

Relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan are particularly poor at the moment.

Afghanistan said this week that Pakistan’s intelligence agency played a role in the assassination of a former Afghan president turned key peace negotiator.

Burhanuddin Rabbani, who was spearheading the reconciliation process with the Taliban in Afghanistan, was killed in a September 20 suicide bombing at his home.

“There are no doubts that ISI had its involvement in the plot,” Interior Minister Bismillah Mohammadi told Afghan lawmakers, referring to Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence agency. “We have handed over the documents and proof to the Pakistani government.”

Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry denied the claims, calling them “baseless allegations.”

Pakistan did not comment on the India-Afghanistan agreement and did not respond to questions from CNN about it Wednesday.

The deal notes that it is “not directed against any other state or group of states.”

It also includes a promise of Afghan support for India’s quest to get a permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council.

CTTA’s Police Training Programs Target Nation Building in Libya

Montreal, Quebec–(November 14, 2012) – The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) (Pink Sheets: CTTG)

The Canadian Tactical Training Academy  (“the Company”) announced today that an agreement has been reached with NISR AL-AMAN located in Tripoli-Libya (ALSARAJ DISTRICT) to act as its master agent and represent the Company in Libya.

After visiting CTTA’s Montreal offices and meeting with management, Mr. Khaled Itaychany, President & CEO of Nisr Al-Aman stated that “the specialized and proven techniques used by CTTA in training law enforcement personnel would be in demand in Libya as the country trains its new police force”.

Intelligent Crowd Control Methodology (Trade Mark Pending) is an important aspect of CTTA’s training curriculum. This approach adheres to Canadian guidelines respecting human rights.

Mr. Itaychany, a resident of Montreal, travels frequently to his native Libya. He will represent CTTA in its efforts to achieve specific goals in the area which includes law enforcement training and selling equipment such as bullet-proof vests and riot gear to the police force.

Mr. Itaychany, who is well known in government circles will also open doors in Libya and intends to schedule meetings with the various ministries responsible for law enforcement.

Mr. Angelo Marino, Vice President of CTTA, commented, “We are pleased to have entered into a working relationship with NISR AL-AMAN and Mr. Itaychany. We have much to offer with respect to the planned training programs in Libya. CTTA is already in Qatar, Kuwait, and other countries to discuss Security Training, Logistics, and Consulting Services opportunities with various government agencies.  The opportunity to provide professional training services in Libya is enormous “

 

About The Canadian Tactical Training Academy

The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to the training of law enforcement, security, investigation, protection officers and all those who dedicate themselves to maintaining peace.

The Academy also provides tailored security and safety-oriented civilian training at both the individual and corporate levels.
CTTA offers recognized tactical training programs of the highest level, as well as specialized programs for the fields of Intelligence and Investigation, Executive Protection and both Public and Private Security and Safety.

CTTA`s Mission is to facilitate professional training and operational objectives by offering the tools and guidance required to enhance careers and ensure survival!

CTTA offers specialized programs such as: Executive Protection, Investigation and Surveillance, Rapid Integrated Survival Kombat (RISK) System, Tactical Firearms, Handcuffing, Airport and Airline Security (IATA and ICAO standards), Ports Facilities and Maritime Security (ISPS Code), Basic SWAT Techniques, Corporate Safety Awareness, and much more.

CTTA`s civilian training programs are recognized by numerous notable corporations, and its instructors are proud members of several prestigious law enforcement and security associations.

 

About NISR AL-AMAN

NISR AL-AMAN is a private Libyan training and development company established to serve as a consultant for the Libyan private sector and the Libyan Government with regards to higher education reform and workforce training.
NISR AL-AMAN works with its partners to outline and identify the needs of Libyan institutions and how to engage foreign institutions in the nation’s rebuilding efforts.
NISR AL-AMAN gives greater focus on workforce training in the following key areas: The training of peace and law enforcement officers, business management, hospitality and tourism, English language and technical training.

Risk factors and cautionary statement about forward-looking information

This press release includes forward-looking statements about our plans and future performance, including those under Outlook for 2011. These statements use such words as “may,” “will,” “expect,” “believe,” “plan,” “anticipate,” “contemplate,” “target,” “continue,” “intend,” “estimate,” “project,” and similar expressions identify forward-looking statements. They reflect our expectations and speak only as of the date of this press release. We do not undertake to update them. Our expectations (or the underlying assumptions) may change or not be realized, and you should not rely unduly on forward-looking statements.

Contacts:
Jocelyn Moisan, Angelo Marino and John Farinaccio
Canadian Tactical Training Academy
7000 Cote de Liesse, Suite 8
Montreal, Quebec, H4T 1E7, Canada
Phone: 514-373-8411

http://www.ctta-global.com

 

CTTA Reports on Successful Security Industry Trade Mission to Brazil

Strong Business Potential Uncovered in High Level Meetings

MONTREAL, Oct 5, 2011 (GlobeNewswire via COMTEX) — The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) was the featured company in a recent trade mission to Brazil sponsored by the province of Quebec.

The trade mission took place from August 29 until September 2, and included visits to Sao Paulo and Brasilia. Angelo Marino, VP of Operations of CTTA represented the company.

CTTA conducted worthwhile meetings with a number of world class Brazilian companies and government agencies including Petrobras, Embraer, Flight Technologies, Dimensao, The Port authority of Santos, the Brazilian Association of Defence and Security Industry, the Sao Paulo Department of the Defence Industry, and Union of State Highway Patrols, among others.

Mr. Marino was extremely pleased with the quality and content of the discussions and indicated that “The companies and government departments that we met were very interested in our products and services. There are a great many opportunities in Brazil for CTTA and I believe that important contracts will be signed in the future.”

Mr. Marino added that he was pleased with the efforts of the Ministry of Economic Development, Innovation and Export Trade, competently represented by Quebec based Karine Couture and Brazilian based Jose Castro, for organizing the trade mission.

CTTA also met with the Canadian Vice Consul and Trade Commissioner in Sao Paulo as well as the regional Manager for the Canadian Export Development Corporation.

CTTA participated in many discussions regarding Risk Management and intends to negotiate consulting contracts to provide services based on its extensive expertise and experience in this sector of the security industry.

Going forward, CTTA will follow up specific requests by providing additional information to various companies and agencies.

Mr. Marino indicated that he expects Mr. Castro, Quebec’s commercial attache in Sao Paulo, to visit CTTA’s headquarters in Montreal in the next few weeks.

During the next few years Brazil will spend more than $1 Billion on all aspects of public security as it prepares to host many very important international events. Security expenditures will include training, risk assessment consulting, and surveillance devices for all levels of the military, police, and events security.

Upcoming events include:

The Brazilian Grand Prix, held annually at Interlagos, is part of the Formula One world Championship.

World Youth Day to be held in Rio de Janeiro in 2013 which will include a visit by Pope Benedict XVI.

The FIFA World Cup of Soccer to be held in 12 cities in 2014.

The Summer Olympics will be hosted by Rio de Janeiro in 2016.

Brazil normally attracts 5 million tourists per year who spend more than $6 Billion dollars. These numbers are expected to rise sharply over the next years.

About The Canadian Tactical Training Academy

The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to the training of law enforcement, security, investigation, protection officers and all those who dedicate themselves to maintaining peace.

CTTA offers applied security devices for surveillance and counter-surveillance activities as well as consulting services related to security risk assessments.

Risk factors and cautionary statement about forward-looking information

This press release includes forward-looking statements about our plans and future performance, including those under Outlook for 2011. These statements use such words as “may,” “will,” “expect,” “believe,” “plan,” “anticipate,” “contemplate,” “target,” “continue,” “intend,” “estimate,” “project,” and similar expressions identify forward-looking statements. They reflect our expectations and speak only as of the date of this press release. We do not undertake to update them. Our expectations (or the underlying assumptions) may change or not be realized, and you should not rely unduly on forward-looking statements.

This news release was distributed by GlobeNewswire, www.globenewswire.com

SOURCE: Canadian Tactical Training Academy Inc.

        CONTACT: Jocelyn Moisan, Angelo Marino and John Farinaccio
        Canadian Tactical Training Academy
        7000 Cote de Liesse, Suite 8
        Montreal, Quebec, H4T 1E7, Canada
        Phone: 514-373-8411

http://www.ctta-global.com            info@ctta-global.com
        Twitter @ CTTAGLOBAL

Canadian Tactical Training Academy, Unitas World, and Nisr Al-Aman Invited to Exhibit at Police Expo in Tripoli, Libya

CTTA’s Police Training Programs Target Security and Stability

Montreal, Quebec–(December 31, 2012) – The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) (Pink Sheets: CTTG)

Unitas World Development Inc. and The Canadian Tactical Training Academy  in conjunction with Nisr Al-Aman, its Master Distributor in Libya, announced today that that they will exhibit in the upcoming police expo in
Tripoli, Libya.

Under the auspices of the Minister of Interior, the Department of Supply Affairs will host the first annual exhibit for police uniforms & equipment which will be held during the period of January 10th to 13th, 2013 at the Tripoli International Fair Grounds.

Manufacturers and dealers and suppliers have been invited to participate in exhibiting up-to-date policing tasks, training programs and clothing, equipment, machinery, devices and tools required for a modern police force.

The invitation to exhibit was extended by the Ministry of the Interior to Mr. Khaled Itaychany, President of Nisr Al-Aman, who stated that “the internationally recognized specialized and proven techniques used by Unitas World and CTTA in training law enforcement personnel is in demand in Libya as the country trains its new police force”.

Unitas World and CTTA deliver targeted police training courses related to various aspects of police work including Police Management and Leadership courses for those participants who exhibit an aptitude for command.

Mr. Angelo Marino, Vice President of CTTA, and President of Unitas World will attend the exposition and represent the companies. Mr. Marino commented, “We are pleased to have been invited to Tripoli and we are working closely with our Master Distributor in Libya, Nisr Al-Aman. We have much to offer with respect to the planned training programs in Libya. Unitas World and CTTA has managed or delivered training programs as well as field security, protection and investigative operations in over 50 countries. We are looking forward to the opportunity to provide professional training services in Libya.”

Calderon: Mexico Casino Fire Deaths “Act Of Terrorism”

www.washingtonpost.com

MEXICO CITY — Calling a deadly fire at a casino “an act of terrorism,” Mexican President Felipe Calderon and his top law enforcement officials vowed Friday to capture the gangsters responsible for the deaths of 52 people who perished in a fire set by gunmen at the Casino Royale in Monterrey.
Security cameras captured images of a dozen assailants pulling up in four vehicles to the front doors of the casino, spilling out of their trucks and cars in mid-afternoon and entering the entertainment complex, which offers bingo and betting on sports and horse racing.
As casino customers are seen quickly rushing from the front doors, some of the gunmen stand watching by their cars. They did not appear to wearing masks, and with computer enhancements, the license plates numbers of their vehicles would likely be readable.
Within two minutes and 30 seconds of their arrival, black smoke and flames appear in the security video and the gunmen are seen rapidly leaving and driving away.
The Casino Royale is the third such establishment targeted this month in northern Mexico. On Wednesday night, gunmen attacked the Caliente Casino in Saltillo, following a similar attack on Aug. 15 against the Sun City casino there.
The industrial and business-oriented city of Monterrey was previously free from Mexico’s crime and murder wave, but in the past year the city has seen its homicide rates soar, as organized crime and drug gangs attack each other and police, and prey upon businesses in extortion rackets.
The governor of the state of Nuevo León in northern Mexico said at a press conference Friday morning the Monterrey fire was ignited by “a group of people linked to organized crime,” but did not specify what group or if there were any links to Mexico’s drug trafficking organizations.
Gov. Rodrigo Medina de la Cruz put the official death toll at 52 and said that most of the victims appeared to have died of smoke inhalation and burns from the fire — and not from gunshots. The governor said that 13 eyewitnesses to the attack had been interviewed.
Wearing a black suit and tie as a sign of mourning, President Calderon said Friday morning that the country was “facing real terrorists who know no limits.
“We have to fight even more forcefully. They can not be allowed to own our streets, our cities,” Calderon said.
In his remarks, Calderon also blamed the United States. The Mexican president called on Congress, the U.S. government and citizens to reflect on the tragedy and see that the insatiable consumption of drugs “involving millions and millions of Americans” fueled the criminal gangs in Mexico with billions of dollars in profits.
“This drug consumption should be reduced drastically, and if that is not possible, the United States must work at least to prevent the transfer of the dollars to Mexico,” Calderon said.
Calderon, however, did not identify what drug smuggling cartel might have been involved in the fire.
The cause of the blaze is under investigation. Some witnesses reported that the attackers threw grenades into the Casino Royale in Monterrey, while others said gasoline bombs started the fire.
The flames trapped customers and staff in the building. A survivor told the Mexico City newspaper Reforma that many of the dead were crushed to death in a stampede for the emergency exits.

The Passing Of A legend And A Friend – John T. McAleese

It is with a heavy heart that we mourn the passing of our adjunct instructor, warrior, friend, colleague, and mentor John T. McAleese.

John is a legendry member of the SAS and will always be remembered for his actions at the Iranian Embassy siege in 1980; where millions watched as the SAS stormed the building. But, John was much more. He was a teacher, a consummate professional, a father and a friend.

Our thoughts and our prayers are with his family and friends. We hope he is now at peace and with his son Paul.

God bless you John and Rest in Peace, Brother.

The Canadian Tactical Training Academy in Brazil

As part of our efforts to continue developing international contracts, CTTA has joined the Quebec government’s trade mission to Brazil, taking place in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro until September 2nd.

Brazil will be hosting several major international events in the coming years including the FIFA 2014 world cup, the 2016 Olympics as well as the annual Brazilian Grand Prix. Thousands of police officers and security guards will need to be hired and trained in preparation for these large-scale events.

CTTA is offering a variety of specialized training to police, military and security forces; including Crowd Control Methodology, Special Event Security & Security Management, Executive Protection Training, domestic Intelligence, Counter Terrorism as well as offering tactical courses such as baton, handcuffing and defensive tactics training.

Brazil will be spending nearly $1 Billion in the coming years on solidifying their security framework.

QUEBEC to INCLUDE CTTA in TRADE MISSION to BRAZIL

Ministry of Economic Development, Innovation and Export Trade Sponsors Security Industry Leaders

Montreal, Quebec–(July 26, 2011) – The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) (Pink Sheets: CTTG).

 

The Canadian Tactical Training Academy is pleased to announce today that it has been selected by the Quebec Ministry of Economic Development, Innovation and Export Trade to be part of an upcoming Trade Mission to Brazil. The Mission will focus on the security industry.

The Ministry`s Department of Latin American Affairs has appointed Ms. Karine Couture, Counsellor in International Affairs to assist CTTA in planning for the Trade Mission. Ms. Couture indicated that CTTA will have one-on-one meetings with between six and ten pre-qualified potential customers in Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro. The Mission begins on August 29 and runs through September 2, 2011.

The Ministry will provide a subsidy in order to reduce CTTA`s expenditures.

During the next few years Brazil will spend more than $1 Billion on all aspects of public security as it prepares to host three very important international events. Security expenditures will include training for all levels of the military, police, and events security.

The Brazilian Grand Prix, held annually at Interlagos, is part of the Formula One world Championship.

In 2014 Brazil will host the FIFA World Cup (of Soccer) in 12 cities.

In 2016 the Summer Olympics will be hosted by Rio de Janeiro.

Brazil normally attracts 5 million tourists per year who spend more than $6 Billion dollars. These numbers are expected to rise sharply over the next years.

Mr. Angelo Marino, Vice President of Operations of CTTA, commented, “We are very pleased to have been selected by the Ministry to be part of this important Trade Mission. This recognition is a confirmation that CTTA is on the right track. Brazil is the place to be for our industry because of the World Cup and Olympics which will be hosted during the next few years.  Also, we already have a partnership in Brazil with MAF Protection Control Risks Group, headquartered in Sao Paulo. “

 

About The Canadian Tactical Training Academy

 

The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to the training of law enforcement, security, investigation, protection officers and all those who dedicate themselves to maintaining peace. The Academy also provides tailored security and safety-oriented civilian training at both the individual and corporate levels.

CTTA offers recognized tactical training programs of the highest level, as well as specialized programs for the fields of Intelligence and Investigation, Executive Protection and both Public and Private Security and Safety.

CTTA`s Mission is to facilitate professional training and operational objectives by offering the tools and guidance required to enhance careers and ensure survival!

CTTA offers specialized programs such as: Executive Protection, Investigation and Surveillance, Rapid Integrated Survival Kombat (RISK) System, Tactical Firearms, Handcuffing, Airport and Airline Security (IATA and ICAO standards), Ports Facilities and Maritime Security (ISPS Code), Basic SWAT Techniques, Corporate Safety Awareness, and much more.

CTTA`s civilian training programs are recognized by numerous notable corporations, and its instructors are proud members of several prestigious law enforcement and security associations.

 

Risk factors and cautionary statement about forward-looking information

This press release includes forward-looking statements about our plans and future performance, including those under Outlook for 2011. These statements use such words as “may,” “will,” “expect,” “believe,” “plan,” “anticipate,” “contemplate,” “target,” “continue,” “intend,” “estimate,” “project,” and similar expressions identify forward-looking statements. They reflect our expectations and speak only as of the date of this press release. We do not undertake to update them. Our expectations (or the underlying assumptions) may change or not be realized, and you should not rely unduly on forward-looking statements.

Contacts:

Jocelyn Moisan, Angelo Marino and John Farinaccio

Canadian Tactical Training Academy
7000 Cote de Liesse, Suite 8
Montreal, Quebec, H4T 1E7, Canada
Phone: 514-373-8411

www.ctta-global.com
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Twitter
Facebook
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Anti-Terror Program ‘Kept New York Safe,’ – NYPD

www.nydailynews.com


 

The NYPD and CIA sent undercover agents to watch mosques, bookstores and cafés in Muslim neighborhoods to sniff out terror plots – a tactic cops say helped them thwart seven planned attacks.

The Daily News largely confirmed the details of an Associated Press report revealing the existence of what it called the NYPD’s Demographic Unit, which uses “mosque crawlers” to gather information.

 

Critics charge the operation to gather intel on the city’s imams, cabbies and street-meat sellers blurs the line between foreign and domestic spying and stretches legal limits on racial profiling.

NYPD Deputy Commissioner Paul Browne blasted the AP story, saying it was “marked by outright fiction,” and insisting there’s no such thing as “mosque crawlers.”

Browne said cops did nothing wrong in their efforts to combat terrorism – and foiled some major plots in the process.

“We’re going to do all we reasonably can to keep New York safe,” he said. “And we uphold the Constitution in doing so.”

He said there have been at least 13 major plots against New York since 9/11 and pointed to seven cases in which information from the NYPD’s Intelligence Unit helped nab would-be terrorists.

 

 

“We commit over a thousand officers to the fight every day to stop terrorists who’ve demonstrated an undiminished appetite to come back and kill more New Yorkers,” Browne said.

“We don’t apologize for it.”

City Councilman Peter Vallone, head of the Public Safety Committee, was even more blunt.

“Maybe they should infiltrate a few sewing clubs, just to be politically correct?” he asked rhetorically. “Clearly, they are going where they reasonably believe terrorist activity could be.”

One source said the department has deep undercovers who live as members of different communities to keep a constant watch for danger.

Top cop taps CIA veteran

The counterrorism operation was started by CIA veteran David Cohen, who was tapped in 2002 by Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly, who thought the 9/11 attacks proved the NYPD could no longer rely on the feds to protect the city.

Cohen and another agency veteran, Larry Sanchez, created an operation inside the NYPD with spies and analysts and an unprecedented international scope. The AP said Sanchez stayed on the CIA payroll while maintaining offices at Police Headquarters and the CIA station in New York.

The revelations of surveillance of New York’s Muslim community reignited the verbal battle about freedom versus security, one that has been smoldering since 9/11.

“The question we should all have is whether the NYPD is operating a domestic CIA – but without the oversight or regulations that hold it in check,” said Donna Lieberman, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union.

“You call the U.S. a free country and you do this?” asked Shahid Malick, 28, a Pakistani cabbie from Bay Ridge.

“From now on, I can’t feel safe in my own mosque because someone might be sitting behind me spying.”

But Saleem Akbar, 58, a fabric store owner who is the unofficial mayor of Midwood‘s large Pakistani community, said the cops are trying to protect everyone in the city.

 

“They are doing it for your children and my children. I don’t mind even if they are doing it secretly. If someone is hatching a conspiracy, they are hiding it from me, too. I want them found out,” Akbar said.

“U.S. security comes first. I don’t care if they are doing it in mosques. I don’t care if they are doing it in airports. I’m glad they are doing it.”

The AP said arrests for even minor crimes could become leverage to persuade someone to become an informant and young Middle Eastern men are singled out for extra questioning.

Rep. Peter King (R-L.I.), chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, said he’s confident the department is abiding by the Constitution.

“I don’t see civil rights abuses,” King said.

“Everyone was critical of law enforcement after 9/11 for not thinking out of the box. The NYPD is getting the job done.”

One source familiar with the NYPD counterterror operations said the only way to root out jihadists is to hang out where they might be.

“If you’re looking for the IRA, you don’t go to Katz’s Deli  – you go to an Irish pub,” the source said.

The cases against Shahawar Matin Siraj, who was found guilty in 2006 of plotting to bomb the subway, and the two men arrested at Kennedy Airport on their way to join terrorists in Somalia, were developed in such a manner.

 

CTTA SIGNS AGREEMENT with KUWAITI SECURITY and DEFENCE AGENCY

AL-SAFWA IS SOLE PROVIDER to KUWAITI MILITARY and POLICE

Montreal, Quebec–(July 25, 2011) – The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) (Pink Sheets: CTTG).

The Canadian Tactical Training Academy announced today that an agreement has been reached with AL-SAFWA SECURITY and DEFENCE SYSTEM COMPANY.

After their meetings in Kuwait and negotiations with AL-SAFWA the CTTA business development team signed a Memorandum of Understanding to co-operate in delivering a “pilot project of Specialized Law Enforcement Training to a select group of participants belonging to the National Police Force, in the State of Kuwait”.

Assistance in negotiating the agreement was provided by Dr. Nasser M. Al-Masri, Chairman of the Alnajah Private Institute, headquartered in Hawalli, State of Kuwait. Dr. Al-Masri is the liaison between CTTA and AL-Safwa and is a member of the Board of Directors of Al-Safwa.
The agreement was signed by Brigadier General Ali Moh`d Al Fodari, Deputy Chairman and Managing Director of Al-Safwa Security and Defence System Company.

Al-Safwa Security and Defence System Company was established in 1993 by retired officers of the Kuwaiti Defence Forces, National Guard, and Fire Brigade with the encouragement of the Amir of Kuwait, with the aim of working closely in coordination with defence forces, security authorities and Ministries to utilize the experience of Retired Officers to serve the country.
The State of Kuwait maintains a 20% ownership of the company.

Mr. Angelo Marino, Vice President of CTTA, commented, “After much hard work and intense negotiations, CTTA is pleased to have entered into this important breakthrough agreement with Al-Safwa Security and Defence System Company. The opportunity to provide professional training services in Kuwait is enormous. CTTA is also operating in Qatar and Saudi Arabia to provide Security Training, Logistics, and Consulting Services opportunities with various government agencies. We expect the Middle East to be an important focus for us in the coming years.”

About The Canadian Tactical Training Academy

The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to the training of law enforcement, security, investigation, protection officers and all those who dedicate themselves to maintaining peace. The Academy also provides tailored security and safety-oriented civilian training at both the individual and corporate levels.

CTTA offers recognized tactical training programs of the highest level, as well as specialized programs for the fields of Intelligence and Investigation, Executive Protection and both Public and Private Security and Safety.

CTTA`s Mission is to facilitate professional training and operational objectives by offering the tools and guidance required to enhance careers and ensure survival!

CTTA offers specialized programs such as: Executive Protection, Investigation and Surveillance, Rapid Integrated Survival Kombat (RISK) System, Tactical Firearms, Handcuffing, Airport and Airline Security (IATA and ICAO standards), Ports Facilities and Maritime Security (ISPS Code), Basic SWAT Techniques, Corporate Safety Awareness, and much more.

CTTA`s civilian training programs are recognized by numerous notable corporations, and its instructors are proud members of several prestigious law enforcement and security associations.

Risk factors and cautionary statement about forward-looking information

This press release includes forward-looking statements about our plans and future performance, including those under Outlook for 2011. These statements use such words as “may,” “will,” “expect,” “believe,” “plan,” “anticipate,” “contemplate,” “target,” “continue,” “intend,” “estimate,” “project,” and similar expressions identify forward-looking statements. They reflect our expectations and speak only as of the date of this press release. We do not undertake to update them. Our expectations (or the underlying assumptions) may change or not be realized, and you should not rely unduly on forward-looking statements.

Contacts:

Jocelyn Moisan, Angelo Marino and John Farinaccio

Canadian Tactical Training Academy
7000 Cote de Liesse, Suite 8
Montreal, Quebec, H4T 1E7, Canada

Phone: 514-373-8411

www.ctta-global.com
Twitter
Facebook
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NYPD Intelligence Unit Seen Pushing Rights Limits

by NPR Staff

Since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, the New York Police Department has become one of America’s most aggressive gatherers of domestic intelligence. Its intelligence unit, directed by a retired CIA veteran, dispatches undercover officers to keep tabs on ethnic neighborhoods — sometimes in areas far outside their jurisdiction.

The existence of the Intelligence Division & Counter-Terrorism Bureau has been public knowledge, but many of its operations were kept secret. An investigation by the Associated Press has uncovered new details about how the unit, led by Deputy Commissioner David Cohen, works.

“The lesson of 9/11 to the NYPD was, ‘We can’t just can’t sit back and let the federal government tell us how to keep us safe or what intelligence we need to know or who might be after us,’” AP reporter Matt Apuzzo tells Morning Edition guest host David Greene. “We need to take responsibility for this ourselves, and we’re going to go to wherever we need to go to get this information.”

 

Interview Highlights:David Greene talks with the AP’s Matt Apuzzo:

On intelligence operations

“What’s new here is just how close a relationship the NYPD has with the Central Intelligence Agency. And because of that relationship, the NYPD has been allowed to expand its intelligence gathering in ways that go far beyond what any other police department in the country can do.”

On ‘rakers’ and ‘crawlers’

“They have teams of undercover officers, they’re known as rakers, who basically just troll ethnic neighborhoods. One officer described it as mapping the human terrain of New York. They also have informants known as mosque crawlers, who as the name implies, just sort of hang out in mosques, being the eyes and ears of the police department in mosques.

On legality

“If the FBI had an informant in a mosque, without information about a crime being committed, that would seem to violate the federal privacy act, which says the federal government can’t collect or maintain information specifically related to First Amendment activities” without specific cause.

On a lack of scrutiny

“The New York Police Department is our largest police department in the country. They get a lot of money from the federal government. There’s not a lot of discussion about whether New Yorkers have given up any privacy or civil liberties in exchange for security. And because there’s not a lot of oversight, I don’t think New Yorkers actually know whether they’ve given up privacy and liberty in exchange for security.”

On public sentiment

“Almost every person we interviewed said, ‘Look, this is exactly what you need. This is what has to happen to keep New York safe. And if we don’t do it, we’re not doing our jobs. And New Yorkers won’t accept another attack. They will accept this, because it’s what has to be done.”

On tactics

“They’re being creative in ways that come right up against the line of what the federal government or other police departments either can do, or feel comfortable doing.”

SAS troopers help co-ordinate rebel attacks in Libya

The serving soldiers have joined British special forces and have been acting as forward air controllers and advising on tactics

www.guardian.co.uk

The Guardian has learned that a number of serving British special forces soldiers, as well as former SAS troopers, are advising and training rebel forces, although their presence is officially denied.
The Guardian has previously reported the presence of former British special forces troops, now employed by private security companies and funded by a number of sources, including Qatar. They have been joined by a number of serving SAS soldiers.
They have been acting as forward air controllers – directing pilots to targets – and communicating with Nato operational commanders. They have also been advising rebels on tactics, a task they have not found easy.
For the SAS it is a return to old stamping grounds. In one of their first successful missions in the second world war, they attacked airfields in Libya, destroying 60 aircraft. SAS battle honours include Tobruk in 1941 and a raid on Benghazi in 1942.
They returned to Libya in February this year, even before the UN mandate urging states to protect civilians from Gaddafi’s forces. Shortly afterwards, a group of SAS soldiers were seized, though quickly released, by nervous rebels south of Benghazi when their Chinook helicopter landed two MI6 officers with communications equipment.
SAS soldiers later advised Misrata-based rebel forces who secured the port city and helped to pass on details of the locations of Gaddafi’s forces to British commanders in the UK and the Naples headquarters of Canadian commander of Nato forces, Lt Gen Charles Bouchard.

In what is hoped to be the endgame in the Libyan conflict and the fight to oust Gaddafi, a number of SAS soldiers are now advising the rebels as they storm the capital, Tripoli.

France is understood to have deployed special forces in Libya and Qatari and Jordanian special forces are believed to have also played a role.

 

RIYADH BUSINESSMAN TO REPRESENT CTTA IN SAUDI ARABIA CTTA’s Efforts in the Middle East are Escalating

Montreal, Quebec–(July 22, 2011) – The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) (Pink Sheets: CTTG),

The Canadian Tactical Training Academy announced today that an agreement has been reached with Mr. Monji Jelessi to represent the company in Saudi Arabia

After visiting CTTA’s Montreal offices and meeting with management, Mr. Jelessi agreed that the specialized and proven techniques used by CTTA in training law enforcement personnel would be in demand in the territory he covers.

Intelligent Crowd Control Methodology (Trade Mark Pending) is an important aspect of CTTA’s training curriculum. This approach adheres to Canadian guidelines respecting human rights.

Mr. Jelessi, a resident of Riyadh, in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, will represent CTTA in its efforts to achieve specific goals in the area. It is a legal requirement in Saudi Arabia for foreign companies to partner with a local operational partner in order to carry on business in the Kingdom.  Mr. Jelessi, who is the owner of a Business/Marketing Development company in Saudi Arabia, is eminently suited in locating an appropriate existing industry partner for CTTA.

Mr. Jelessi , who is well known in government circles will also open doors in the Kingdom and intends to schedule meetings with the various ministries responsible for law enforcement.

Mr. Jelessi may also be active on behalf of CTTA in Tunisia and other countries in the area.

Mr. Angelo Marino, Vice President of CTTA, commented, “We are pleased to have entered into a working relationship with Mr. Jelessi.  We have much to offer with respect to the planned training programs in Saudi Arabia.  CTTA are already in Qatar, Kuwait, and other countries to discuss Security Training, Logistics, and Consulting Services opportunities with various government agencies as a follow up to our recent trip and to meet with new potential clients. ”

 

 

About The Canadian Tactical Training Academy

The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to the training of law enforcement, security, investigation, protection officers and all those who dedicate themselves to maintaining peace. The Academy also provides tailored security and safety-oriented civilian training at both the individual and corporate levels.

CTTA offers recognized tactical training programs of the highest level, as well as specialized programs for the fields of Intelligence and Investigation, Executive Protection and both Public and Private Security and Safety.

CTTA`s Mission is to facilitate professional training and operational objectives by offering the tools and guidance required to enhance careers and ensure survival!

CTTA offers specialized programs such as: Executive Protection, Investigation and Surveillance, Rapid Integrated Survival Kombat (RISK) System, Tactical Firearms, Handcuffing, Airport and Airline Security (IATA and ICAO standards), Ports Facilities and Maritime Security (ISPS Code), Basic SWAT Techniques, Corporate Safety Awareness, and much more.

CTTA`s civilian training programs are recognized by numerous notable corporations, and its instructors are proud members of several prestigious law enforcement and security associations.

 

 

Risk factors and cautionary statement about forward-looking information

This press release includes forward-looking statements about our plans and future performance, including those under Outlook for 2011. These statements use such words as “may,” “will,” “expect,” “believe,” “plan,” “anticipate,” “contemplate,” “target,” “continue,” “intend,” “estimate,” “project,” and similar expressions identify forward-looking statements. They reflect our expectations and speak only as of the date of this press release. We do not undertake to update them. Our expectations (or the underlying assumptions) may change or not be realized, and you should not rely unduly on forward-looking statements.

Contacts:
Jocelyn Moisan, Angelo Marino and John Farinaccio
Canadian Tactical Training Academy
7000 Cote-de-Liesse, Suite #8
Montreal, Quebec, H4T 1E7, Canada

Phone: 514-373-8411

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CTTA Updates the Market

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/43488762/ns/business-press_releases/t/ctta-updates-market

 

MONTREAL, June 21, 2011 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) (Pink Sheets: CTTG), a leader in the worldwide training of peace and law enforcement officers, is pleased to provide this update of its current activities.

Mine-Site Security Teams

CTTA has been approached by consultants working for TSX listed mining companies with operations in South America and west Africa. With the increase in value of gold and diamonds, mine-site security has become an evident and important part of many mining operations. Mine sites are increasingly dependent on armed personnel in order to ensure economic viability.

In view of this opportunity, CTTA is developing multiple teams which will be comprised of experienced operatives including ex-Rangers, former Special Forces, and former UN personnel.

 

 

Defensive Tactics Training

In order to respond to actual and anticipated customer needs CTTA is currently training twelve experienced industry individuals who will become instructors in order to execute current contracts in the United States and overseas. The increase in the number of instructors will be required for projected contracts in the Middle East as a result of intensive business development activities in the region. The comprehensive “train-the-trainer” course will be completed on June 23.

Montreal Airports Airport Patrol Certification Program

The Canadian Tactical Training Academy’s Training Facility in Montreal was the site of the recently concluded annual re-certification of security officers who comprise the Airport Patrol and are assigned to protecting the Montreal Pierre Elliot Trudeau International Airport (YUL) and the Montreal Mirabel International Airport (YMX). More than 200 certificates were awarded to the successful participants.

There are two certification programs, each of which is valid for a two year period. Participants are re-certified in each program on alternate years.

The mission of the Airport Patrol is to protect passengers, personnel and facilities against all threats to civil aviation at Montreal–Trudeau and Montreal–Mirabel airports. The patrol has approximately 250 members, divided into a number of specialized teams, including drugs and explosives detection and investigations.

CTTA Hires Cornwallis MacKenzie for Business Development in the UK

CTTA is pleased to announce that it is in discussion with Business Activity parties with contacts in the UK to develop relationships with Police Departments. Cornwallis MacKenzie, with offices in the United States, Canada, and Europe, is assisting CTTA in the process of accessing and responding to public tenders in the UK.

About The Canadian Tactical Training Academy

The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to the training of law enforcement, security, investigation, protection officers and all those who dedicate themselves to maintaining peace. The Academy also provides tailored security and safety-oriented civilian training at both the individual and corporate levels.

CTTA offers recognized tactical training programs of the highest level, as well as specialized programs for the fields of Intelligence and Investigation, Executive Protection and both Public and Private Security and Safety.

Above and beyond the quality of its training programs, the strength of an academy resides in the competency and capabilities of its instructors. CTTA`s instructors are carefully selected and have proven their superior skills in both the field and the classroom before they are entrusted with providing guidance and professional development to its students.

CTTA`s Mission is to facilitate professional training and operational objectives by offering the tools and guidance required to enhance careers and ensure survival!

CTTA offers specialized programs such as: Executive Protection, Investigation and Surveillance, Rapid Integrated Survival Kombat (RISK) System, Tactical Firearms, Handcuffing, Airport and Airline Security (IATA and ICAO standards), Ports Facilities and Maritime Security (ISPS Code), Basic SWAT Techniques, Corporate Safety Awareness, and much more.

CTTA`s civilian training programs are recognized by numerous notable corporations, and its instructors are proud members of several prestigious law enforcement and security associations.

 

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London Riots: Violence Escalates Across London

www.telegraph.co.uk

Police last night appeared to be losing the battle to take back control of London’s streets as violence, rioting and looting escalated across the capital.

As disturbances entered a third day, the scale of civil disobedience reached unprecedented levels, with incidents in all corners of the capital.

The violence, which began in Tottenham, north London on Saturday spread south and east to Brixton, Streatham, Walthamstow, Edmonton, Enfield, Oxford Circus and Islington on Sunday.

By last night further outbreaks of disorder involving hundreds of hooded yobs had taken place in Hackney, Clapton, East Ham, Lewisham and Clapham Junction. Property and shops were set on fire in Peckham and Croydon.

David Cameron last night announced he would cut short his family holiday in Italy to return to deal with the crisis.

Earlier, Boris Johnson, the London mayor, was forced into an embarrassing climbdown when he announced that he too was coming back hours after his deputy said that to do so would be to reward the rioters.

Theresa May, the Home Secretary, who also cut short her holiday, refused to be drawn when asked if Britain’s streets were becoming “lawless”.

As violent confrontations, organised using mobile phone instant messaging systems, spread, Birmingham became the first city outside London to experience trouble with rioters smashing city centre shop windows.

The first wave of attacks in the capital took place in broad daylight as the evening rush hour began. In some of the worst scenes yesterday, youths clashed with riot officers on Mare Street in Hackney, east London, throwing rocks and missiles. One police officer said looted machetes had been used to try to attack officers.

Police were pelted with fireworks and petrol bombs, patrol cars were smashed while other vehicles and buildings were set alight.

Riot officers, whose numbers had been quadrupled in anticipation of widespread violence, seemed largely powerless to intervene as they were outnumbered.

Other areas including Barking, Brent Cross, Palmers Green, Kilburn and Shepherds Bush were expecting violence as gangs of youths congregated. Shops across the capital closed early amid fears that the riots would spread further. Teams of riot officers were on standby in every borough in London.

West Midlands Police confirmed that extra officers were on patrol after the force became aware of a message circulated on social networking sites suggesting that Birmingham city centre would be targeted.

But with no sign that the tactic of increasing police numbers was succeeding, the Government and police faced growing questions over their handling of the riots.

Nick Clegg, the Deputy Prime Minister, heard during a visit to Tottenham that locals felt police had deserted them. “There was nobody there to protect us”, one resident told him.

Police admitted they were struggling with the number of incidents as rioters used social networking sites such as Twitter and Facebook to plan their violence. Former police officers said that the sporadic nature of the riots was unprecedented.

Police said they were monitoring these sites and would prosecute people who used the internet to incite violence. One message posted called for a police officer to be killed.

However, much of the planning apparently took place on BlackBerry smartphones, which have a free messaging system. Police are unable to monitor these messages, but BlackBerry’s manufacturer said it would try to co-operate with detectives.

Roy Ramm, a former Scotland Yard commander, said the Met could lose control of London’s streets. “That has to be a possibility and the Home Secretary and [Met] commissioner are going to have to make some difficult decisions.” He said that by using mobile phones and social networks “these people can mass and change direction very quickly and the police tactics are being subverted”.

Last night more than 200 people had been arrested, the majority of them teenagers. The youngest was an 11 year-old, who was charged with burglary. Twenty seven people had been charged with a variety of offences.

Scotland Yard has been stung by accusations of a power vacuum at senior level. It is without a commissioner following the resignation of Sir Paul Stephenson last month.

Tim Godwin, the acting commissioner, made a brief statement to reporters yesterday but it was not until last night, following a meeting with the Home Secretary, that he appeared on television to condemn the worst riots in more than a quarter of a century.

He urged parents to contact their children to get them indoors.

Mr Godwin said that while the violence on Saturday was rooted in frustration over the death of Mark Duggan, a 29-year-old father of four shot dead during a police operation, later disorder on Sunday was “pure criminality”.

Stephen Kavanagh, the deputy assistant commissioner, added: “On occasions like this it is the burglars, the thugs and the bullies that are trying to make the most of the opportunity.”

There were fears that tensions may rise further today when the Independent Police Complaints Commission confirms that a bullet that hit a police officer’s radio in the incident in which Duggan died was a police issue bullet.

Talks have been held with the organisers of Notting Hill Carnival, which takes place at the end of this month, as fears grow that it could become a focal point for violence.

Police have already admitted that they had no choice but to allow looters to steal from high street shops on Saturday evening as they had to focus on the dozens of burning buildings and rioting in Tottenham.

Former Met commanders said the riots were unprecedented in their sporadic and spontaneous nature.

Brian Paddick, the former deputy assistant police commissioner who was a sergeant during the Brixton riots in the 1980s said: “We have not faced this situation before.

“In the absence of intelligence it is a major difficulty for the police, and the fact it is sporadic and widespread.”

 

 

CTTA Teaches Intelligent Crowd Control Methodology

Intelligent Crowd Control Methodology (Trade Mark Pending) is an important aspect of CTTA`s training curriculum. This approach adheres to Canadian government guidelines respecting human rights.

Intelligent Crowd Control Methodology allows law enforcement personnel to effectively maintain the peace in a manner that protects the individual demonstrator from injury.

The Canadian Tactical training Academy developed this comprehensive proprietary methodology in response to legal requirements in Canada.

Acceptance and demand for this approach in world markets soon followed.

Governments, armed forces, and police departments desire to maintain the respect of its citizens even under adverse conditions.

News clips of bloodied demonstrators on the evening news do not engender respect; quite the opposite, they produce an even more violent response by the crowd.

Intelligent Crowd Control Methodology helps the law enforcement officer control the situation without causing unnecessary harm to the subjects in a manner which ensures his own safety.

The Canadian Tactical training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to worldwide training of peace and law enforcement officers, as well as all other professionals involved in the fields of security, investigation, protection and the maintenance of order.
The Academy also provides tailored security and safety-oriented civilian training at both the individual and corporate levels.

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CTTA Executive Will be a Featured Speaker at CJSC Institute Seminar

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/ctta-executive-will-be-a-featured-speaker-at-cjsc-institute-seminar-2011-07-06?reflink=MW_news_stmp

Angelo Marino – “Islamic Mythology for Law Enforcement & Security Personnel” Seminar

MONTREAL, Jul 6, 2011 (GlobeNewswire via COMTEX) — The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) CTTG.PK, a leader in the worldwide training of peace and law enforcement officers, is pleased to announce that Angelo Marino, its Vice President of Operations, has been invited to address an important and timely seminar entitled “Islamic Mythology for Law Enforcement & Security Personnel” to be hosted by the Criminal Justice Security Career Institute.

 

 

The Criminal Justice Security Career Institute (CJSC Institute) under the direction and leadership of the President/CEO Jorge Reyes Jr. (former U.S. OIG, Sr. Special Agent) and in partnership with the Florida Technical College (FTC) will host the seminar on Thursday, July 7, 2011 at the CJSC Institute/ FTC facilities located in Orlando Florida.

 

The seminar is open to law enforcement executives, criminal justice educators, security experts, intelligence analysts, legal representatives, public officials, and others.

Featured Special Speakers

 

Angelo Marino, Vice President of the Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA).

Educated and certified in various North American institutions, Angelo Marino completed a Master of Science in Policing and Social Conflict and a Bachelor of Science in Criminal Justice Administration.

Mr. Marino was awarded the `Citizenship Achievement Award` for outstanding service to community and country, by the Canadian House of Commons and is a distinguished coach and educator for National Security Alliance, Kid-Safe Network.

 

 

Mr. Marino, who also serves as the Chief Instructor for CTTA, is considered to be one of Canada’s most renowned specialist and master instructor. Mr. Marino has worked in over 43 countries as an instructor, operator, and security consultant. Mr. Marino has personally trained the Presidential Security Details of two countries.

 

Bassem Chaaban, Director of Operations, Center for Peace, Islamic Society of Central Florida.

The Islamic Society of Central Florida (ISCF) is an organization which strives to serve the greater Central Florida community by catering to the social, religious, and economic needs of its Muslim inhabitants. By integrating a diverse, and talented, rich Muslim populace with the greater Central Florida community based upon a foundation built upon mutual respect and understanding, ISCF is focused on developing a model American Muslim community.

 

The Center for Peace is a non-profit, volunteer, outreach arm of the Islamic Society of Central Florida that works to dispel stereotypes and misconceptions about Islam and Muslims. With the mission in mind that education builds tolerance and understanding, the Center for Peace continues to bond people for unity and peace. The objective of the Center is to facilitate and coordinate outreach efforts in the Central Florida community by promoting understanding and acceptance among people of all faiths and backgrounds about Islam.

 

By establishing the Seminar Initiative, the CJSC Institute hopes to make a difference by creating awareness and understanding in support of all personnel involved in homeland security.

 

Sheriff tells Congress he needs more personnel to patrol shipping channel

The Houston Chronicle

Harris County Sheriff Adrian Garcia warned members of Congress last week that budget cuts to local law enforcement agencies could make the nation’s maritime borders vulnerable to terrorist attacks.

Testifying before a House Homeland Security Subcommittee, Garcia said a hiring freeze has already left his agency understaffed and overworked, leaving the economically important Houston Ship Channel Security District to be patrolled at times by a force not trained for maritime security.


The fiscal year 2012 Homeland Security Appropriations bill passed by the House cut grants to local and state law enforcement programs by $1.23 billion, a 55 percent reduction from grant programs in 2011, Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., told the panel.

The appropriations legislation is waiting action in the Senate.

Garcia told the panel that local law enforcement agencies depend on this federal money. He declined to say specifically how many additional officers he felt were needed to patrol the channel, citing security concerns.

“We need additional resources to help us at the local level so we can stay ahead of domestic and international terrorism,’’ he said. “Our biggest challenge in securing the ship channel is the woeful shortage of these resources from all government levels.”

Alan Bernstein, director of public affairs for the sheriff’s office, declined to say how many officers now patrol the channel, also citing security concerns.

The channel, part of Port Houston, is a passage for ocean vessels coming and going from the Gulf of Mexico to Houston-area shipyards and oil refineries.

Garcia’s agency has received $30 million in Homeland Security grants for hardware upgrades but he said he needs additional money to fund salaries.

The Harris County sheriff’s budget received $382 million from the county for this fiscal year.

Documents recovered from the raid on Osama bin Laden’s compound, Garcia said, revealed that al-Qaeda considered attacking oil tankers like the ones that use the Houston channel.

Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Laredo, said budget constraints must force agencies from each level of government to work efficiently together but that protecting water borders should be a top priority.

“Ultimately, whether we are talking about narcotics, undocumented aliens, or those who might wish to do us harm, we know that people will take the route they perceive to offer the best opportunity to enter the country,” Cuellar said. “If we secure the land borders, people will try to come across our maritime borders and vice versa, so we must take a comprehensive approach to our nation’s border security.

 

 

 

Port Facilities and Maritime Security Courses offered by CTTA
The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to worldwide training of peace and law enforcement officers, as well as all other professionals involved in the fields of security, investigation, protection and the maintenance of order.

CTTA offers a Port Facilities and Maritime Security course which includes the following topics:

•International Maritime Organization
•International Shipping and Port Facility Security Code(ISPS Code)
•Definitions and Responsibilities according to the ISPS Code
•Planning for Port Facility Security: The 3 Levels of Security
•Identification, Recognition, and Reaction to Threats: Concepts of Security
•Equipment Related to Port Security
•Security Measures for Port Security
•Fundamental Concepts Related to Port Security
•Education and Training Relative to Port Security

The Academy also provides tailored security and safety oriented civilian training at both the individual and corporate levels.

 

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SOME THOUGHTS ON THE DEMISE OF BIN LADEN

SOME THOUGHTS ON THE DEMISE OF BIN LADEN.

THE END OF AL QAEDA?

 

Montreal, July 6, 2011

 

Recent events in Pakistan have raised questions on the future of terrorism, what the death of Bin Laden means and where this all may take us in the near and mid-range future.

We asked Mr. Ronald Myles, former RCMP (Royal Canadian Mounted Police) and CSIS (Canadian Security Intelligence Service) investigator with a profound knowledge of terrorists and terrorism from around the world to give us a few comments on the latest developments.


Mr. Myles is retired from active duty but has agreed to assist and is presently on the Board of Advisors of the Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA). He works closely with the CTTA in following world events and providing his unique insight and comments on events related to security matters.  CTTA specializes in teaching anti- terrorist training and methods of protection and self-protection for people traveling in dangerous regions.

 

Mr. Myles commented on the major security event of the year.  The following are his comments.

Bin Laden is dead. Shot by American Navy SEALS and subsequently buried at sea. Does this mean that Al Qaeda is dead and that there will be no more terrorism?

Sorry, but it doesn’t work that way. Al Qaeda is a successful terrorist organization and they will continue their ‘work’. Part of the reason that it is successful is also one of the aspects that make it difficult to stop. That is compartmentalization.  In intelligence agencies this is called “The need to know principle” As head of Al Qaeda, Bin Laden was the apparent leader of a massive organization stretching all through the third world. Indeed, intelligence reports state that there are “Al Qaeda” cells in Great Britain and North America. But the idea that he was an actual ‘leader’ is more wishful thinking on his part than reality.  Bin Laden could release his video-taped declarations to the world but his influence was limited by a number of facts.

 

Directives are given by the leadership.  There is a certain amount of communication between the parties and it would be easy to think that with the passing of Bin Laden, the terrorism and terrorist acts would die with him. After all, he’s not there anymore to organize and order terrorist acts. Unfortunately, and despite the above, an organization like this is not really centrally administered or controlled.  Communication is short and brief, sometimes using the public air waves to pass coded messages.

Directives given by the leaders are more suggestions, an attempt to co-ordinate efforts and create the perception of unification, but the receiving body is not obliged to follow these orders and indeed oftentimes doesn’t.  As well there are often philosophical differences between the leaders.

 

One of the aspects of successful terrorist organizations throughout the world is the ‘cell’.   According to the theory, a cell is made up of anywhere between 3 and 6 people who are willing to work for a common goal, usually political in nature and who are willing to use violence or deadly force to achieve their objectives. More than 6 people in any one cell is considered a security risk.  Only one person in any particular cell knows any one person in another cell.    This type of structure is in place for security reasons.  If one person is caught by the authorities, he can only give up the people in his own cell.  In a worst case scenario, if the leader of the cell was caught, he could only give up one other cell. The other cells would be safe.  Whereas this does have certain security advantages, it makes the organization difficult if not impossible to control.

Al Qaeda is made up this way. There are ‘branches’ of Al Qaeda throughout the middle east. They will continue bombing, sending young people on suicide missions and generally trying to take control of their particular piece of real estate. So in that sense, terrorism in general is not dead, it is not going away and we can look forward to many more years of this kind of conflict.  So the death of the leader is not going to stop Al Qaeda.  There are others in place to carry on his work.

BUT

If there is a light on the horizon, it comes from short off-handed statements made by US Government officials when they were making their press releases, describing the raid on the Bin Laden compound and what the SEALS took away with them besides the terrorist’s body.  Computers, documents and video tapes that were seized after the shootout with Bin Laden all may contain information on Bin Laden’s associates, plans etc.  What it boils down to is how much data did Bin Laden kept in any form other than his personal memory. If it is on a computer, we can be sure that the Americans will break any code or password or whatever and extract the info.  If it is written down and coded, someone in the US intelligence system will break that code and if it is on video tape, then the US now has photos of the enemy.

 

So in a sense, Al Qaeda may be brought to its knees by the actions of the same man who built it up. If there is a lot of good intelligence on these media, then we’ll see the result in the next few weeks and months as the US closes in on more and more Al Qaeda operatives. If Bin Laden didn’t keep notes like we hope he did, then its business as usual.  Only time will tell.

 

The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) (Ticker Symbol: CTTG) is an organization devoted to worldwide training of peace and law enforcement officers, as well as all other professionals involved in the fields of security, investigation, protection and the maintenance of order.

 

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Watchdog calls for review of counter-terrorism powers at ports and airports

http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2011/jul/18/travel-counter-terror-powers-review-call

 

David Anderson QC says powers used to stop more than 85,000 travellers in 2009/11 may erode trust for some communities

The use of counter-terrorism powers by special branch officers to randomly stop and examine more than 85,000 travellers a year at ports and airports should be reviewed, a government watchdog says.

David Anderson QC – who replaced Lord Carlile as the independent reviewer of counter-terrorism legislation – said 2,687 people were questioned for more than an hour in 2009/10 to establish if they were or could be involved in terrorist activity. A total of 466 people were detained for up to nine hours.

Anderson said the number of travellers detained under the schedule 7 powers of the Terrorism Act 2000 declined in 2010/11, but no official figures have yet been published.

His call for a review follows complaints by the Federation of Student Islamic Societies that people from minority groups, especially Asians, areup to 42 times more likely than white people to be the target of schedule 7 powers.

The Home Office has responded to concerns among minorities “who may believe they are disproportionately affected” by saying it is looking at how the power is used. Officials are to report later this year.

Anderson said that in the absence of a reliable breakdown of the ethnic or religious background of those who are stopped, it is difficult to reach conclusions. But he said his own experience backed up research findings by Durham University that random stops at airports have a negative impact within Muslim communities.”Negative experiences included repeated stops of the same individuals; the stress caused to the person stopped and to those travelling with them, as they worry about missing flights or losing baggage; the seizure of mobile phones and credit cards, intrusive and maladroit questions about religious beliefs and community activities; and a feeling they were being targeted as Muslims and used to build up a profiles of Muslim communities,” said Anderson in his annual report, published on Monday.

“I heard similar stories myself from Muslim organisations and individuals.”

He said he had no doubt that schedule 7 powers were useful in the conviction of terrorists, but that must be weighed against the fact that for some communities it is “bubbling under the surface … eroding trust”.

He said there should be a “careful review of the extent and conditions” of the use of schedule 7 powers involving the police, airlines and carriers, port users and the public to ensure there are adequate safeguards.”

Terrorism is crime, and should be prosecuted as such wherever possible. A thicket of special powers for dealing with terrorism has grown up over the past 12 years, many of them useful and even necessary,” said Anderson.

“But we lose ground to the terrorists if we allow those powers to be operated without sufficient regard for the liberties of innocent people who risk being subjected to them.”



The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to worldwide training of peace and law enforcement officers, as well as all other professionals involved in the fields of security, investigation, protection and the maintenance of order.


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FACING THE TERRORISM THREAT FROM TWO SIDES

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/europe/nation-in-mourning-defies-gunman-who-wrote-serbia-bombing-tipped-the-scales/article2107826/

Norwegians, reeling at the death of at least 93 adults and children in Friday’s mass shootings and bombing attack, are being forced to confront the fact that the perpetrator is not a lone madman, but a highly organized Norwegian political terrorist who claims to be part of a Europe-wide movement opposed to Muslim immigrants and multiculturalism.

The confessed killer, 32-year-old Anders Behring Breivik, released a 1,500-page manifesto moments before his terror spree and made statements through his lawyer while being interrogated on the weekend that suggest he intends to use his atrocity as a platform to espouse a type of anti-immigrant politics that has become increasingly popular in Europe.

The revelations come as a blow to European police and intelligence officials, who now appear to face two parallel terror threats, one Islamic and one anti-Islamic, which share xenophobic beliefs, violent tactics and even inspirational leaders, and differ only in their targets.

Amid the grief over the car-bomb explosion set off by Mr. Breivik in central Oslo that killed at least seven, followed by a 90-minute shooting spree on a small island summer camp for supporters of the governing Labour Party in which Mr. Breivik chased down and killed at least 87 youth and children, some reportedly under 10 years old, Norwegians pledged to defy his beliefs.

“I am proud of living in a country that has managed to stand up on its feet in such a critical time. … We are still horrified over what happened. But we will never give up our values,” Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg told thousands of people gathered at Oslo’s cathedral for a sombre memorial service Sunday.

Mr. Stoltenberg repeated his call to reject the terrorist’s anti-immigration and anti-multiculturalism rage by reinforcing those very values: “Our answer is more democracy, more openness, and more humanity – but never naivety.”

Mr. Breivik, according to police, willingly confessed to the killings, though he claims that he was not breaking the law. At a pretrial hearing Monday he will be allowed to make a statement, which his lawyer said would be a lengthy declaration of his political beliefs. Norwegian authorities said they may close the hearing to the media.

They are also scrambling to assemble intelligence and policing resources to confront a political movement that had been considered alarming but largely non-violent in previous years, one that includes elected parties and movements in the Netherlands and Finland as well as scores of fringe parties and publications throughout the continent.

In his manifesto, titled “2083: A European Declaration of Independence” and written under an Anglicized version of his name, Mr. Breivik describes himself as a member of a nine-year-old organization he calls the Knights Templar Justiciar, comprising between 12 and 18 members, who pledge to use “martyrdom” to crush Muslim immigration, multiculturalism, and the individuals and parties who tolerate immigrants, who they characterize as “Marxists” or “multiculturalists.”

Mr. Breivik’s lawyer said on Sunday that his client is a member of an international network. The manifesto was first sent Friday morning to the True Finns, an extreme-right party that holds nearly 20 per cent of the seats in Finland’s parliament.

The title of his work describes the year when Mr. Breivik believes that Muslims will become a majority in Europe and a racial war will be required. (This is based on demographic concepts, popular on the extreme right, that have been refuted by science. Muslims are and will remain a small minority in Europe.)

His manifesto draws approvingly on the ideas of popular anti-immigration and anti-multiculturalism writers and figureheads such as Geert Wilders, Bruce Bawer, Melanie Phillips, Theodore Dalrymple, and Canadian Mark Steyn in order to characterize Muslims as being united in an ideological conspiracy to impose a “Eurabia” through “demographic warfare” and dominate the population.

CTTA offers comprehensive Counter-Terrorism courses designed for decision makers and first responders.
From preventative design to developing intelligence assets to the first response to an attack CTTA provides law enforcement personnel the tool to counter this growing threat.

The Canadian Tactical training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to worldwide training of peace and law enforcement officers, as well as all other professionals involved in the fields of security, investigation, protection and the maintenance of order.
The Academy also provides tailored security and safety-oriented civilian training at both the individual and corporate levels. 

www.ctta-global.com
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CTTA Confirms Ronald Myles to Join Board of Advisors

http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/news.html?d=222354

Former CSIS and RCMP Operative to Counsel Management

MONTREAL, May 17, 2011 — The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) (Pink Sheets: CTTG)

The Canadian Tactical Training Academy, a leader in the worldwide training of peace and law enforcement officers, is pleased to announce that Ronald E. Myles has been selected to serve as a member of the Board of Advisors for the company.

The Board of Advisors, chosen for their demonstrated interest in and support of the company, are committed industry experts who serve as advocates for the company by promoting its goals, counseling company management, assisting with sales, introducing new initiatives, and publicizing the company. The Board is composed of some of the industry’s most renowned training innovators, counter-terrorist experts, and former high-ranking government agents. Mr. Myles will commence an initial one-year term on the board starting on May 11, 2010.

Today Ronald Myles stated, `I am pleased to be part of the CTTA team and look forward to using my expertise to assist the company in a time when the security and well being of free and democratic nations is under threat.`

Prior to becoming a member of CTTA’s Board of Advisors, Mr. Myles, a graduate of Concordia University, served in the intelligence community starting with the RCMP (Royal Canadian Mounted Police) where he was assigned to the surveillance unit of its Security Service. In the late 1970s Mr. Myles was assigned to the counter-terrorist desk in Montreal as an investigator and then as head of an operational unit. In 1984 the Security Service of the RCMP became, by decree, the Canadian Security and Intelligence Service (CSIS). Mr. Myles continued his career with CSIS until his retirement in 1997.

As an investigator, Mr. Myles conducted interviews, recruited and handled informants / collaborators within various ethnic communities; the main objective being to assess the threat posed to the national security by terrorist groups and general espionage. As a unit head, Mr. Myles was responsible for a group of investigators and communications analysts.

Liaison and the exchange of information with other organizations of the intelligence community is a crucial part in determining emerging trends relating to the CSIS mandate whether on the counter-terrorist or the counter-espionage investigations. In this capacity, Mr. Myles represented CSIS in many of the international and national conferences.
Mr. Myles is currently the President of CSJ International Inc., Consultants in Security.

About The Canadian Tactical Training Academy

The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to the training of law enforcement, security, investigation, protection officers and all those who dedicate themselves to maintaining peace. The Academy also provides tailored security and safety-oriented civilian training at both the individual and corporate levels.

CTTA offers recognized tactical training programs of the highest level, as well as specialized programs for the fields of Intelligence and Investigation, Executive Protection and both Public and Private Security and Safety.

Above and beyond the quality of its training programs, the strength of an academy resides in the competency and capabilities of its instructors. CTTA`s instructors are carefully selected and have proven their superior skills in both the field and the classroom before they are entrusted with providing guidance and professional development to its students.

CTTA`s Mission is to facilitate professional training and operational objectives by offering the tools and guidance required to enhance careers and ensure survival!
CTTA offers specialized programs such as: Executive Protection, Investigation and Surveillance, Rapid Integrated Survival Kombat (RISK) System, Tactical Firearms, Handcuffing, Airport and Airline Security (IATA and ICAO standards), Ports Facilities and Maritime Security (ISPS Code), Basic SWAT Techniques, Corporate Safety Awareness, and much more.

CTTA`s civilian training programs are recognized by numerous notable corporations, and its instructors are proud members of several prestigious law enforcement and security associations.

Contacts:
Jocelyn Moisan, Angelo Marino and John Farinaccio
Canadian Tactical Training Academy
7000 Cote de Liesse, Suite 8
Montreal, Quebec, H4T 1E7, Canada
Phone: 514-373-8411

http://www.ctta-global.com
info@ctta-global.com
Twitter @ CTTAGLOBAL

DEA Arrest Highlights Drug Trade / Terrorism Connection

Income from drugs helps the terrorist groups buy weapons and explosives and pay off corrupt governments

LARRY NEUMEISTER, Associated Press | | Wednesday, July 27, 2011

NEW YORK (AP) — Federal authorities said Tuesday they have found fresh evidence of growing cooperation between the drug trade and terrorists in a probe of two major overseas networks of narcotics dealers.

 

The investigations resulted in the arrests of four men, including one who agreed to support the Taliban in Afghanistan with revenues from the drug trade, U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said at a news conference.

“Today’s indictments provide fresh evidence of what many of us have been seeing for some time: the growing nexus between drug trafficking and terrorism, a nexus that threatens to become a clear and present  danger to our national security,” he said. “As crime goes global, the long arm of the law has to get even longer.”

 

To infiltrate the networks, the Drug Enforcement Administration utilized DEA sources posing as links to the Taliban and Lebanon’s Hezbollah.

Derek Maltz, special agent in charge of the DEA Special Operations Division, said the probe was a response to the growing realization that drug dealers were funding terrorism. He estimated that 50 percent of foreign terrorist organizations are involved in some aspect of the drug trade.

 

He said income from drugs helps the terrorist groups buy weapons and explosives and pay off corrupt governments, besides funding expenses such as travel.

 

In one case, authorities announced the arrest of Taza Gul Alizai. An indictment accused him of selling about 5 kilograms of heroin in May 2008 to a DEA source who posed two years later as a Taliban representative when Taza Gul agreed to arrange the sale of six AK-47 assault rifles and an additional 10 kilograms of heroin.

 

The indictment said a co-conspirator of Taza Gul told the DEA source that heroin laboratories in Afghanistan are under Taliban protection.

 

In the other prosecution that involved meetings in Turkey, Romania and Greece, DEA sources arranged to import hundreds of kilograms of high-quality heroin into the United States, telling their targets that they would use proceeds of the drug deals to buy weapons for Hezbollah, an indictment said.

 

 

Two of three men charged in that probe agreed since February to buy military-grade weapons from the DEA sources so that they could be provided to the Iran-backed Hezbollah Shiite Muslim militia, the indictment said, citing meetings in Romania, Cyprus, Malaysia and elsewhere.

 

Authorities said the men signed a written agreement in Malaysia last month to buy 48 American-made Stinger missiles, 5,000 AK-47 assault rifles and 1,000 handguns, among other weapons, for $9.5 million.

 

Those arrested in the probe on conspiracy and weapons charges were identified as Siavosh Henareh, Bachar Wehbe and Cetin Aksu.

 

Henareh and Aksu were arrested in Bucharest, Romania, on Monday. According to Interpol notices Monday, Wehbe and Taza Gul were detained in the Maldives; both were transferred to DEA custody and brought to New York. At initial court appearances, both were detained without bail. Lawyers for both declined to comment.

 

All four men face various narcotics and conspiracy charges that carry the potential for a sentence of life in prison. It was not immediately clear who will represent the men in the United States.


Canadian Tactical Training Academy
7000 Cote de Liesse, Suite 8
Montreal, Quebec, H4T 1E7, Canada
Phone: 514-373-8411

 

CTTA to Re-Certify 250 Security Officers Protecting Montreal’s International Airports

MONTREAL, May 10, 2011 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) :

http://newsblaze.com/story/2011051018200200001.pz/topstory.html

 

The Canadian Tactical Training Academy’s Training Facility in Montreal will be the site of the annual re-certification of more than 250 security officers who comprise the Airport Patrol and are assigned to protecting the Montreal Pierre Elliot Trudeau International Airport (YUL) and the Montreal Mirabel International Airport (YMX).

There are two certification programs, each of which is valid for a two year period. Participants are re-certified in each program on alternate years. Certificates are issued by CTTA to successful participants upon completion of the program.

The security officers underwent their initial training under the auspices of CTTA.

The fully equipped training facility includes equipment such as body shields, focus gloves, batons, handcuffs, and Body Opponent Bags or “BOBs” for realistic training.

The training facility is located near the Trudeau airport and is fully booked until mid-June.

All of CTTA’s many courses can be conducted at the Montreal location except for live-ammunition firearms training which is given in the United States at a range used by US federal agencies.

International courses may be delivered at other locations around the world.

The mission of the Airport Patrol is to protect passengers, personnel and facilities against all threats to civil aviation at Montreal–Trudeau and Montreal–Mirabel airports. The patrol has approximately 250 members, divided into a number of specialized teams, including drugs and explosives detection and investigations.

The patrol’s responsibilities include responding to emergencies, enforcing regulations, controlling traffic, detecting explosives and policing restricted areas.

The Montreal Pierre Elliot Trudeau International Airport is the third busiest airport in Canada and according to its website, handled almost 12 million passengers in 2010. It is one of eight Canadian airports with United States border preclearance and is one of the main gateways into Canada with 8 million of its passengers being on non-domestic flights, the highest proportion amongst Canada’s airports during 2010. The Montreal Mirabel International Airport is the second largest airport in the world in terms of surface area.

The Canadian Tactical training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to worldwide training of peace and law enforcement officers, as well as all other professionals involved in the fields of security, investigation, protection and the maintenance of order.

The Academy also provides tailored security and safety oriented civilian training at both the individual and corporate levels.

 

Risk factors and cautionary statement about forward-looking information

This press release includes forward-looking statements about our plans and future performance, including those under Outlook for 2011. These statements use such words as “may,” “will,” “expect,” “believe,” “plan,” “anticipate,” “contemplate,” “target,” “continue,” “intend,” “estimate,” “project,” and similar expressions identify forward-looking statements. They reflect our expectations and speak only as of the date of this press release. We do not undertake to update them. Our expectations (or the underlying assumptions) may change or not be realized, and you should not rely unduly on forward-looking statements.

CONTACT: Jocelyn Moisan, Angelo Marino and John Farinaccio
         Canadian Tactical Training Academy
         7000 Cote de Liesse
         Montreal, Quebec, H4T 1E7, Canada

         Phone: 514-373-8411

http://www.ctta-global.com

         info@ctta-global.com

 

New NYPD Dirty Bomb Detection System

www.lawofficer.com

 

NEW YORK — The New York Police Department is testing ground-breaking counterterror technology expected to dramatically increase its ability to detect and thwart a potential radiation attack, officials said Thursday.

 

The technology will allow a command center in lower Manhattan to monitor 2,000 mobile radiation detectors carried by officers each day around the city. The detectors will send a wireless, real-time alert if there’s a reading signaling a dirty bomb threat.

The system already is being tested under the watch of federal authorities in hopes it can be perfected and used elsewhere.

“This is the first and only place you’ll see it,” said Jessica Tisch, an NYPD counterterrorism official. “It’s been tested in the field. It works, and we’re hoping to get (the wireless detectors) deployed in a few months.”

A dirty bomb — intended to spread panic by using a small explosive to create a radioactive cloud in urban settings — has never been discovered or detonated in a U.S. terror plot. But law enforcement considers dirty bombs a serious threat because they’re easy to build and because of intelligence that foreign terrorists want to use them against American cities.

 

 

The radiation detection system is being developed as part of a $200 million lower Manhattan security initiative. Police say the overall plan was inspired by the so-called “ring of steel” encircling the business district in London but is broader in scope and sophistication.

The initiative will rely largely on 3,000 closed-circuit security cameras carpeting the roughly 1.7 square miles south of Canal Street, the subway system and parts of midtown Manhattan. So far, about 1,800 cameras are up and running, with the rest expected to come on line by the end of the year.

In 2008, police began monitoring live feeds from the cameras round-the-clock at a high-tech command center in lower Manhattan, home to Wall Street, the new development at ground zero, and other sites needing heightened protection.

 

 

“We’re talking about some of the most significant targets anywhere in the world,” Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said Thursday.

The NYPD is using a single, high-bandwidth fiber optic network to connect all its cameras to a central computer system. It’s also pioneering “video analytic” computer software designed to detect threats, like unattended bags, and retrieve stored images based on descriptions of terror or other criminal suspects.

CTTA offers comprehensive Counter-Terrorism courses designed for decision makers and first responders.
From preventative design to developing intelligence assets to the first response to an attack CTTA provides law enforcement personnel the tool to counter this growing threat.
The Canadian Tactical training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to worldwide training of peace and law enforcement officers, as well as all other professionals involved in the fields of security, investigation, protection and the maintenance of order.
The Academy also provides tailored security and safety-oriented civilian training at both the individual and corporate levels.

www.ctta-global.com
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CTTA Will Participate in the Brazilian Security Boom

(March 30, 2011)

MONTREAL, March 30, 2011 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) (Pink Sheets:CTTG) is pleased to announce the signing of a partnership agreement with MAF Protection Control Risks Group of Brazil.

Security in Brazil will attain unprecedented levels of global importance due to the fact that this region of the world will be host to international events such as the Formula 1 race circuit, the 2014 World Cup soccer championships and the 2016 Olympic Games.

Angelo Marino, Vice-President of CTTA stated, “It is ever so important in times where the need for proven security measures present themselves, that experienced professionals of the industry work together to ensure the safety of the general population. This strategic alliance comes at the opportune moment.”

CTTA and MAF Protection Control Risks Group will be working side by side to deliver specialized Event Security and Executive Protection Training as well as offering tailored security services for those who require them.

Jocelyn Moisan, Angelo Marino and John Farinaccio from the board of directors, invite those who wish to visit our head offices in Montreal for a tour and/or training demo, to contact us for an appointment at 514-373-8411 between 09:00 and 16:00 ET or at info@ctta-global.com

For more information please visit www.ctta-global.com

India says all terror groups on radar for Mumbai blasts

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/world/2011-07/14/c_13985541.htm

NEW DELHI, July 14 (Xinhua) — India Thursday said that all terror groups operating from the country or abroad are on the radar for the serial blasts that rocked Mumbai Wednesday which claimed the lives of at least 17 people and injured over 70 others.

Meanwhile, Indian security agencies are focusing attention upon the home-grown terror group Indian Mujahedeen (IM) as the perpetrator of the blasts.

“We do not want to proceed with any kind of pre-supposition and speculate. All groups who have the capacity are suspected. All angles will be explored, leads will be followed without any predetermination of the cause,” Indian Home Minister P. Chidambaram told the media in Mumbai. The Indian Home Minister also admitted there was no intelligence inputs related to Wednesday’s blasts.

“There have been no inputs from the central and state agencies. This cannot be referred to as an intelligence failure since we keep talking to each other every hour. The group has worked in a clandestine manner and so could not be tracked,” he said.

Chidambaram, however, said that preliminary investigation suggested that the blasts were not executed with the help of a remote trigger. “Ammonium nitrate has been used with a timer device. The three blasts were separated by an eight to 10 minute interval that shows it was a coordinated terror attack,” he said.

The Indian government Thursday put all its metropolitan cities, including the national capital, on high alert following the serial blasts that rocked Mumbai. “The Indian capital, the southern cities of Hyderabad, Chennai and Bangalore, and the eastern city of Kolkata have been put on high alert. All the local governments have been asked to step up security,” a senior government official said.

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Congress chairperson Sonia Gandhi are due to visit the blast sites Thursday evening.

Meanwhile, the Anti-Terrorist Squad (ATS) of Mumbai said the home-grown terror group, Indian Mujahedeen’s (IM) Bhatkal brothers are behind Wednesday’s blasts.

The IM is also blamed for other terror attacks across India, including the Jan. 2010 attack against a German restaurant in Pune, western India, which killed a dozen people, including foreigners.

The terror group also has the penchant to stage attacks on the date 13th and 26th, as most of the past attacks, including the 2008 Mumbai attacks, took place on these two dates, according to local experts.

 

_____________________________________________________

 

CTTA offers comprehensive Counter-Terrorism courses designed for decision makers and first responders.

From preventative design to developing intelligence assets to the first response to an attack CTTA provides law enforcement personnel the tool to counter this growing threat.

 

The Canadian Tactical training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to worldwide training of peace and law enforcement officers, as well as all other professionals involved in the fields of security, investigation, protection and the maintenance of order.
The Academy also provides tailored security and safety-oriented civilian training at both the individual and corporate levels.

www.ctta-global.com
Twitter
Facebook
LinkedIn
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CTTA Promotes US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) Recognized Training Through Its New Partner

(March 25, 2011)

MONTREAL, March 25, 2011 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The Canadian Tactical Training Academy (CTTA) (Pink Sheets:CTTG) is pleased to announce the signing of a partnership agreement with Palestra Group of New York State.

 

This Concealed Compartment Course has been specifically tailored for Law Enforcement Officers conducting Drug Trafficking Organization Investigations (DTO), Money Laundering Organization Investigations (MLO) and Criminal Enforcement Patrols. The program has been developed to curtail the unimpeded flow of bulk currency, narcotics and firearms both domestically as well as cross border. The Financial Operations of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) which contracts the Concealed Compartment Course attributed $27.9 million in seized currency to the Concealed Trap Initiative in 2008.

John Farinaccio, Vice-President of CTTA, stated; “The experience of Palestra Group Instructors both American and Canadian will be a definite asset to CTTA as it responds to the increasing demand for specialized Law Enforcement Training around the world.”

CTTA and Palestra Group will be presenting their gamma of products and training at the Blue Line Magazine Law Enforcement Trade Show in Markham, Ontario, Canada, on April 26 and 27, 2011.

Jocelyn Moisan, Angelo Marino and John Farinaccio from the board of directors, invite those who wish to visit us at the trade show or at our head offices in Montreal for a tour and/or training demo, to contact us for an appointment at 514-373-8411 between 09:00 and 16:00 EDT or at info@ctta-global.com

For more information, please visit www.ctta-global.com

FBI Probes How Stun Gun Got on Plane

http://www.lawofficer.com/article/news/fbi-probes-how-stun-gun-got-pl

PASSAIC COUNTY, N.J. — A stun gun that looked like a cellphone was found aboard an empty JetBlue airplane that had landed at Newark Liberty International Airport on Friday night, raising questions about how the concealed weapon made it past security checkpoints.

The FBI is investigating the apparent security lapse, authorities said Monday. The thin, rectangular device was found in a seat pocket by a worker cleaning the airplane after it arrived from Boston’s Logan International Airport. Authorities said it was likely left behind by a passenger.

The passenger assigned to the seat where the stun gun was found said Monday during a brief phone interview that it was not hers.

Kara Kearney, an auditor at Boston University, said she moved from her assigned seat, 10B, because a nearby television monitor showing the in-flight movie, “Troy,” was not working. The stun gun was found in the pocket in front of 10B, authorities said.

“It’s not mine, but I really don’t want to talk about it,” the 31-year-old from Lincroft said before hanging up.

Authorities said the stun gun was likely not intended as an in-flight weapon.

“We know who the passengers were, and based on preliminary information, it does not appear that an attack was imminent,” said Bryan Travers, spokesman for the Newark FBI office. “This was more of a case of someone bringing something on a plane that they shouldn’t have brought.”


Travers declined further comment.

“This incident is the latest in a troubling pattern of breaches in our aviation security system,” said Sen. Frank R. Lautenberg, vice chairman of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Homeland Security. “TSA and the FBI need to quickly determine how this stun gun made it onto a plane, and we need assurances that steps are being taken to make sure this doesn’t happen again.”

The stun gun, identified by authorities as a “Striker 1800KV,” was found on Flight 1179. There were 96 passengers and four crew members on the flight, according to a JetBlue statement. The stun gun was in a black case and resembled a cellular telephone, Port Authority spokesman Steve Coleman said.

Similar stun guns offered on the Internet sell for about $20. The Striker is “one of the highest voltage compact models on the market,” according to onlinestunguns.com, a website advertising the stun gun. The site says the 1.8-million-volt shocking device measures a little over 4 inches long and 2 inches wide.


It is illegal in New Jersey to carry a stun gun, which can momentarily incapacitate a person. They are also prohibited as carry-on items but may be transported in checked luggage, according to the TSA website.

Port Authority police were notified of the stun gun about 10:20 p.m., after a worker preparing the plane for another flight found the gun. Police swept the plane with K-9 units but found nothing suspicious, and the plane was cleared to board passengers for the next flight out of Terminal A. Coleman said the FBI and TSA were notified and have taken over the investigation.

 

A TSA representative issued a statement Monday but would not say whether the agency’s screening measures would detect a stun gun.

“TSA employs multiple layers of security to minimize risk, deter future attacks and protect the traveling public,” the TSA said in a statement. “Those layers include checkpoint screening technology, federal air marshals, fortified cockpit doors and armed pilots, among others both seen and unseen.”

Travers said the investigation was being handled by the FBI’s Boston office. A spokesman from the Boston office did not reply to a message seeking comment.

 

__________________________________________________________

 

CTTA offers an Airport and Airline Security course, which includes the following topics:

Airport Security Operations
-ICAO and IATA security standards
-Perimeter protection and access control
-Protecting public areas
-Protecting restricted area-Vehicle and pedestrian patrols

Airline Security Operations
-ICAO and IATA security standards
-Passenger Profiling
-Passenger and employee screening
-Dealing with unruly passengers
-Cargo, courier and mail security

The Canadian Tactical training Academy (CTTA) is an organization devoted to worldwide training of peace and law enforcement officers, as well as all other professionals involved in the fields of security, investigation, protection and the maintenance of order.
The Academy also provides tailored security and safety-oriented civilian training at both the individual and corporate levels.

www.ctta-global.com
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