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OSINT
I believe we all have different reasons for being here. My interests use OSINT to identify victims and traffickers and general research into cyber-related fields. I find a lot of great info on LinkedIn (that's how I found 'We Fight Monsters'!). If you're interested in learning more about OSINT and it's applications two of the best accounts to follow are Ubikron (https://www.linkedin.com/company/ubikron/) and OSINT Experts Society (https://www.linkedin.com/groups/13047129/). Both have plenty of resources and regularly post items of interest.
Active Shooter Response: The police perspective
Active shooter events are chaotic, fast, and violent. They unfold in seconds, not minutes. And while civilians often hear the aftermath on the news, law enforcement lives inside the first moments — where every decision carries life-or-death weight. Here’s what people don’t always see from our side of the line: 1. Officers Are Trained to Move Toward the Threat The standard across the country is simple: Find the shooter. Stop the killing. Stop the dying. Gone are the days of waiting for SWAT. Patrol officers — the ones already on the street — form up and move in immediately. That means they enter the building while shots are being fired, knowing the suspect may be around any corner. 2. Speed Matters More Than Perfection In an active shooter, every second equals lives. Officers aren’t clearing rooms slowly and methodically like in the movies. They’re bypassing people, skipping hallways, stepping over chaos — all to get to the shooter as fast as humanly possible. It’s controlled aggression, not cinematic tactics. 3. Communication and Intelligence Are Broken, Messy, and Loud Inside these events: - Everyone is screaming - Fire alarms are blaring - Radios cut in and out - People are running in opposite directions - Officers may not know how many shooters there are It’s not organized. It’s not clean. It’s sensory overload — and cops have to make decisions anyway. 4. Officers Will Walk Past the Wounded This is one of the hardest realities for civilians to understand. The mission is: Stop the threat first. If the shooter is still active, officers may move past injured victims to prevent more victims. It’s not coldness. It’s triage under fire. Stopping the shooter ultimately saves more lives. 5. Once the Threat Is Down, the Mission Changes Immediately after neutralizing the shooter, officers switch roles: - Casualty care - Tourniquets - Evacuations - Securing medical routes - Guiding fire/EMS into the building Cops become the bridge between chaos and rescue.
Situational Awareness
Most civilians walk through life in Condition White—heads down, distracted, unaware of what’s unfolding around them. The amount of times I’ve had to respond to a robbery because the victim wasn’t paying attention is a very large number. The common theme is, “I was looking at my phone.” Or “I was listening to music.” Victims has skyrocketed as a result of modern day cell phones. People watching TikTok videos, YouTube, etc. Awareness has truly taken a hit as a result. You don’t need to live paranoid. But you do need to live aware. Colonel Jeff Cooper’s Color Code is one of the simplest and most effective systems ever created for understanding awareness levels. It wasn’t designed for fear—it was designed for clarity, readiness, and survival. Here’s how civilians can use it in everyday life: Condition White — Unaware This is when you’re buried in your phone, zoned out, or mentally “off the clock.” In public, this is the most dangerous state to live in. You’re not scanning. You’re not noticing behavior. You’re not registering exits, threats, or even social cues. You’re simply there—and if something happens, you’re behind the curve. Condition Yellow — Relaxed Awareness (The Goal) This is the state civilians should live in anytime they’re in public. You’re relaxed, calm… but switched on. Your eyes are up. Your mind is open. You’re aware of who’s around you, what looks normal, and what doesn’t. Not paranoid. Not tense. Just present. Think of Yellow as: “Nothing’s wrong… but I’m ready if it is.” Master this, and most problems never reach you. Condition Orange — Focused Attention Something caught your eye. A behavior, a movement, a situation that doesn’t look right. Not a threat yet… But something worth evaluating. A person loitering near cars. Someone pacing outside a store. A couple arguing in a way that’s escalating. A vehicle doing slow laps through a neighborhood. In Orange, you form a simple plan: If X happens, I’ll do Y. That alone puts you miles ahead of danger.
Free online training
Team, Red Team Leaders, on CourseStack, has an introductory course on CSAM (Child Sexual Abuse Material) Investigation that's free. As many of you know, CSAM can intersect human trafficking. The course gives a big, 20,000 ft view so don't expect a lot of technical discussion. They've got other cyber relate courses as well but this is the only one focused on our lane. https://redteamleaders.coursestack.com/courses/2a412d31-a2e4-47ce-9709-14f711e1d53b
The Power of Simple Observation
I want to share a quick story to remind everyone here how much impact a single person can have just by paying attention. A friend of mine called me one day because something across the street from his house didn’t feel right. New people had moved in, and for the first week everything seemed normal. Then he started noticing patterns. Not paranoia… actual patterns. - People acting as lookouts during certain hours - Strange activity right before things got “busy” - Young women coming and going late at night - Behavior that didn’t fit the normal rhythm of a home He didn’t jump in. He didn’t confront anyone. He didn’t assume he knew exactly what was happening. He just observed and trusted his instincts enough to speak up. That single call helped law enforcement build a case, move quickly, and shut down an illegal operation before more damage was done. Here’s the point: You don’t need to be a cop to protect your neighborhood. You don’t need to “get involved” physically. Just pay attention to the environment you live in. Observation is a superpower that civilians underestimate. - Trust your instincts. - Notice patterns, not random moments. - Report what feels off. Most major cases in neighborhoods don’t start with a detective. They start with a neighbor who was paying attention. Stay aware, stay safe, and stay connected.
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Owen Army
skool.com/owenarmy
We train others to combat human and narcotics trafficking, how to turn dope houses into hope houses, and how to transform pain into purpose.
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