Feral Jundi

Monday, March 29, 2010

Aviation: Drones Slowly Becoming The New ‘Virtual Fence’ On Border

   So are we actually shutting down the virtual fence, or are we just using a different method of creating a virtual fence? I also want to highlight another ongoing saga involving drones and a call for troops.  In Texas, governor Perry has been fighting to get more drones and more troops on the border in order to stop the spill over of violence, and has met a lot of resistance from the feds on this.

    Over the last year, this has been more political than anything, seeing how Perry is Republican and the Administration and Congress is mostly Democrat. Increasing border security activities goes against any kind of immigration reform or amnesty initiatives, because it sends a mixed message to the U.S. citizenry.  The narrative is this– ‘Do we want to stop illegal immigrants from crossing the border so we can stop them from killing Americans or bringing over drugs/supporting the cartels, or do we want them coming over and giving them a free pass so we can get cheap labor? I side on the idea that people should come to my country legally, and go through the same process that all immigrants have gone through who have come to the US.  Why the Mexican immigrant is a special case, is beyond me. Especially when drug cartels are taking advantage of these immigrants and a weak border, and flooding my country with their drugs.

   But back to border security.  As soon as Americans die, either on the border or on either side of that border, I think politics tends to go out the window, and reality sets in. The attack on diplomats and the astronomical increase in deaths across the border in places like Juarez, have presented a reality where border security might start getting the attention it needs.  Our use of drones will probably increase along the border, as will our assistance to the Mexican government in stopping the cartels. American deaths are game changers, and those acts will only put the war back into the ‘drug war’. The bitter irony is American deaths have already been high do to drug overdoses or drug related crimes in the US. I guess it takes killings on the border to really drive home the point.-Matt

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Drones silently patrol U.S. borders

By Ed Lavandera

March 12, 2010

Fort Huachuca, Arizona (CNN) — It’s a frigid, dark night in the mountainous border region of southeast Arizona. A group of 31 suspected illegal immigrants are walking up and down rocky ridges toward Tucson, Arizona. They’re wearing small backpacks and stop to rest every few minutes.

This isn’t a scene unfolding before the eyes of Border Patrol agents on the ground. It comes from a video image provided by a Predator B unmanned aircraft 19,000 feet overhead. In fact, the nearest Border Patrol agents are far away.

Jerry Kersey is the Customs and Border Protection agent in charge of this night’s Predator mission. He and his two-man crew relay the information to Border Patrol agents from a small trailer 40 miles from the scene.

Kersey directs the agents on the ground, who are wearing night-vision goggles.

“Stop! Stop! They’re to your right,” Kersey firmly dictates over a radio transmission. “They must see you. The group is running.”

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Monday, February 22, 2010

Jobs: USIBWC Security Guard, Texas

   I have never heard of this agency, but I guess they hire guards.  This is government work, and the salary is a tad bit low, but at least it is CONUS.  I am not the POC or recruiter for this, and just follow the link below to USAJobs to apply. Good luck. –Matt

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Job Title: Security Guard

Agency: International Boundary & Water Commission: United States & Mexico

Job Announcement Number: DEU-10-21-319812-LL

SALARY RANGE: 27,990.00 – 40,706.00 USD /year

OPEN PERIOD: Friday, February 12, 2010 to Friday, February 26, 2010

SERIES & GRADE: GG-0085-04/05

POSITION INFORMATION: Full TimeCareer/Career Conditional

PROMOTION POTENTIAL: 05

DUTY LOCATIONS: few vacancies – El Paso, TX

WHO MAY BE CONSIDERED: United States Citizens

JOB SUMMARY:

Provides mission critical security duties for the American Dam Field Office.

Discover El Paso!

El Paso is located at the western tip of Texas, where Texas, New Mexico and Old Mexico meet. It is the largest international metroplex in the world and seamlessly blends cultures and traditions: from the historic Old West to the colors of Mexico, from the heritage of Native Americans to the beauty of our desert sun.

El Paso is Texas, but it’s just a little different. So come enjoy the warmth of our sun and our smiles – and do Texas different!

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Wednesday, December 30, 2009

DIY: Survival Mindset, Snares And Kit Ideas, By Doug

Filed under: DIY,Fish and Game,Texas — Tags: , , , , , , , , — Matt @ 5:51 AM

   This is some good stuff.  Doug (not Doug Brooks) has been working on a lot of interesting concepts lately involving lightweight combat survival kits and the mindset and knowledge necessary to use all of that stuff. So it is cool to see where it is all taking him.

   To properly set this up, Doug lives down in Texas, is prior service and has worked in the security contracting industry. He has guest posted before, and is a welcome contributor to the blog.  Enjoy. –Matt

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 Texas Hog

 

     Here is a website and book which I’ve found absolutely awesome.  It is set up by some US Military SERE instructors.

Their belief is that any man in the world can live off the land, very well in fact with nothing more than:

-a handful of snares

-.22 pistol

-poncho

-thermals

-bowie knife & multi tool

     I have been playing with their techniques out in the woods for the past couple of weeks or so and have concluded they are right.  Damn right in fact!

     Attached is a picture of a 200 lb. wild boar which I took last week with a single shot from a .22 pistol. As soon as he was hit with the sub-sonic round he dropped to the ground.

(he appears a lot smaller than he actually was, due to me having cleaned him & having his skin with its 1.5″ fat layer removed.)

    The boar was caught up in one of my snares. The snare had caught him right around the nose.  Boy, was he really pissed off when I walked up on him while checking my trap line the other morning.

     I shot him from 20 yards because I knew I could and more to the point I wanted to stay near a tree encase I had to climb it if need be. It was an instant kill so it turned out to be no worries.

     At noon the day before, I set up 3 hog snares.  By 9am the next morning two of the snares had game in them, while the third had either fallen down or been knocked down by a passing coyote.

    Now talk about an easy way to get food. With minimal effort using only a handfull of commercial grade snares, I had 300 lbs of animal laying on the ground.   all in a span of a few hours with having burned minimal calories.

     Also, this was my very first time setting up snares, so needless to say I am highly impressed. Talk about an extremely successful method of living off the land.

     The snares take up very little space in my buttpack.  6 small snares (squirrles, rabbits, skunks, or anything up to 20 lbs), 4 medium snares (coyotes, racoon, deer, or anything up to 100 lbs) & 1 large snare (large deer, aligator, black bear, wild hog up, or anything up to 200 lbs) are a perfect loadout.

Plus, if you were to attach the snares to a lifting trap, one could trap even larger animals.

     Now addmittedly it took all day for me and one of my buddies down here to process all that meat.  Way too much work for one person.  I wont be setting up more than 1 large game trap at a time from now on. But this is how we learn.

In fact I learned a ton on trapping from that one FTX.

     Now if one were to combine the skills of living off the land with super lightweight gear from our SERE instructors with trackers, then one could have an extremely highly effective tracking team. They wouldn’t even need to carry armor or much ammo. A rifle with 1-2 mags is all. Their job isn’t to engage baddies but simply trail them and radio in their location.

     Even without the tracking aspect, those SERE instructors really know there business. Their $13 book is worth every penny.  Those boys are squared away.

     As far as outdoor survival goes, everyone and their dog has some sort of survival book & dvd out there.  they all say pretty much the same thing.  Interesting yes, but I haven’t been overly impressed. The SERE instructors though, are the heat.  No bs and all practicallity.

    What I really love about them is their travel light & stay warm at night attitude.  (you may not always be comfortable, but you will be alive & well.) With my messed up spine, I simply can not carry that much weight anymore.

    My daily carry out here in the woods, outside of what is on my belt & in my pants pockets is just a maxpedition fanny pack. (expensive but a very tough piece of kit)

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Tuesday, December 29, 2009

PMC 2.0: Armchair Deputies Patrol U.S. Border

   I posted a deal about this awhile back, and it is cool to finally get some statistics about the program.  I thought it was an awesome idea back then, and I still think it is good idea and deserves further study and use.

   Now some of you are probably wondering why this isn’t under law enforcement or technology?  I put it under PMC 2.0 because I think the lessons learned with this virtual border watch program, could easily be applied to other countries and border security contracts.  Especially countries where border control is a matter of life and death, where terrorists are looking to import their hate.

   Look at the Afghanistan and Pakistan border, or the Iraq borders, or the Saudi Arabia and Yemen border?  Crowd sourcing a border watch program could very well be the trend of future border security operations.  It also involves that Grandma in Michigan, if in fact she wanted to make  a difference in the war effort or with border enforcement here in the US. It is like a modern day version of the coastal lookouts that civilians participated in back during World War Two.

   By the way, these guys should turn this into a mobile application for smart phones, and make this something people can do while waiting in the doctor’s office before an appointment.  That would really increase the numbers if you know what I mean.-Matt

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Armchair deputies patrol US border

December 26, 2009

By Claire Prentice

When John Spears gets home from his sales job in New York, he sits down at his computer with a bottle of beer and starts patrolling the US border.

And to do it, he does not need to stir from his sofa.

He is one of tens of thousands of people around the world who are volunteering to patrol the 1250-mile long (2000 km) stretch between Texas and Mexico via the web.

The controversial $4m (£2.5m) Texas Virtual Border Watch Programme invites civilians to log on to Blueservo.net.

There they can monitor live feeds 24/7 from 21 hidden surveillance cameras placed at intervals along the border.

Supporters see the initiative as a step forward in US efforts to curb illegal immigration, drug smuggling and border violence.

Critics say it is encouraging vigilantism and stoking anti-immigrant feeling.

Value for money?

(more…)

Friday, November 6, 2009

Law Enforcement: The Hero That Took Down Hasan–Sergeant Kimberly Munley

Filed under: Law Enforcement,Texas — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 5:55 PM

   The tragedy at Ft. Hood the other day is a hard one to comprehend and accept.  It happened, and it was awful. That is really all I have to say about the act itself.

   What I want to point out was the hero that took Hasan down.  It was a female police officer, who charged this animal in a hail of bullets and stopped him.  She also took two shots to the legs, one in each thigh, and she deserves the highest praise.  Matter of fact, everyone involved with stopping Hasan, and administering aid to the wounded deserves our highest praise.  That is my take away on this tragedy. –Matt

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Kimberly

Officer Who Shot Suspect Is Firearms Expert

By JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr.

November 7, 2009

KILLEEN, Tex. — The police officer who brought down a gunman after he went on a shooting rampage at the Fort Hood Army base was on the way to have her car repaired when she heard a report over a police radio that someone was shooting people in a center where soldiers are processed before they are deployed abroad, authorities said on Friday.

As she pulled up to the center, the officer, Kimberly Munley, spotted the gunman, Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, brandishing a pistol and chasing a wounded soldier outside the building, said Chuck Medley, the director of emergency services at the base.

Sergeant Munley bolted from her car and shot at Major Hasan. He turned toward her and began to fire. She ran toward him, continuing to fire, and both she and the gunmen went down with several bullet wounds, Mr. Medley said.

Whether Sergeant Munley was solely responsible for taking down Major Hassan or whether he was also hit by gunfire from another responder is still unclear, but she was the first to fire at him.

Sergeant Munley, who is 34, is an expert in firearms and a member of the SWAT team for the civilian police department on the base, officials said.

(more…)

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