Never wear slip-on loafers for EP... Always a lace-up shoes. Nexbelt are excellent for EP loadout and are extremely durable. N*EAR makes one of the best minimalist earpieces on the market, super-lite and low-profile.
This is actually a really good video. Thanks for putting out this info. It's definitely a great base for an EPA agent. The only exception that I would take is with that Perry Ellis belt. I never have good luck with that buckle. Every time I load out stuff on it and tighten it up it seems to tear. I go with a uniform dress belt. It's sturdier and they could pass as a regular dress belt. Otherwise great video.
I know this is an old video, but here are my two cents after 22 years in the business. Shoes can be purchased with rubber soles. I'm a very big fan of the shoe brand Allen Edmunds, Oxford with Dainite Rubber Soles. you will spend a bit more on them, but I have shoes that are 10-15 years old.
In colder situations, I would consider ditching one or two pistols for a concealable IIIA vest. You could get one for under $300 and it weighs like 2lbs.
In ear "FBI style" curly sets are pretty bad for reducing situational awareness (they block up one ear). The molded style ones are far better if you want to attempt low profile on a budget. I've always hated the silly 2 wire sets - No one walks around talking into their sleeves unless using one of these sets, so you might as well wear a hi-viz vest with "Look At Me" written all over it. Get a 3 wire version with separate earpiece, PTT and microphone. The mic goes just inside your lapel and the PTT can be fed through a small hole in your jacket / trouser pocket. This way, you can press the PTT in a less attention grabbing way whilst speaking somewhat normally. Hold up a phone to your head and no one will be any the wiser, or, have a local shop CNC machine a phone sized piece of plastic to use as a totally disposable "phone" to hold up whilst talking on the radio - If things get exciting, you can simply drop it on the floor without having to fumble putting a $1000 I-phone away. Your local radio dealer (if they're serious) can wire a socket into the setup to accept a second PTT. They could also supply a large "slap pad" PTT to insert into your breast pocket. In a hands-on situation, you won't have to put your hands into your pockets to activate the PTT, rather you'd simply press your chest. If a headset has that silly two-pin "Kenwood" plug, it is designed for a toy radio with low capability. Look at the new R7 series from Motorola or the new H series from Hytera - These have VERY advanced audio leveling and noise cancelling features that will help get the message through first time. In radios such as this, advanced encryption is a simple tick box.
I agree about swapable mags, but nobody carries .40. You are better suited to glock 19 on your hip and a 26 on your cankle. Both have swapable mags and any cop will have extra 9mm glock mags. Oh, and never trust your life to kel-tec jam-o-matic. If you need a small sub rock a roni or a glockmag 9mm pistol calibur carbine. Then you have 33 round mags for your pistol.
No bullet resistant vest? No handcuffs? No tourniquet? Throw all that other stuff away. You need a vest to shield your principal, a firearm, comms, cuffs, and comfortable shoes. You should also have a tourniquet/med kit on you, or within the immediate vicinity, like in the car.
When I did EP work and was with principal, I wore a Point Blank 3A vest with Level 4 ceramic inserts and a carbon fiber liner to interrupt TASER or stungun. I carried a G19 with 15 round mag as primary pistol with a pair of 33 round mags for reloads and a snubnose .357 as a backup. Knife was 4" Gerber folder. Usually had pepper spray but no baton or handcuffs as it wasn't my job to stick around and apprehend anyone, but to exfil. I always wore lace-up shoes, typically Bates Oxfords with a non-slip sole and a clip-on tie that doesn't get you choked.
We have crye vest and carry full blow out kits in a go bag that stays near us but most EP don’t carry cuffs because we can’t even legally arrest (even as an off duty officer). Used to carry zip cuffs when working digpro and OCNUS but thats the only time and only used them once.
Definitely, buddy! Always have trauma gear nearby. Some things I just chose not to show off on vid like type of armor, type of med gear, few other things, but yes, always ALWAYS trauma gear and more within reach. Thanks for watching my friend
Good Suit now a days companies make them with Stretch Materials 1 pistol with Light 1-2 xtra mag with +5 extension Good Kydex Holster Tenicor safari land Next or Kore Belt TQ Small Ifak Flash Light Knife Multi tool Possibly Asp baton AirPods N-ears ear piece Glasses Shoes with laces Clip on Tie
Good morning, I have been doing Private security for about 10 years now and would like to get further into the EP side of things. Any advice on where to start?
Hey brother. Yes, my journey was sort of backwards to what most people do, but best thing you can do for step 1 is to attend a good credible EP course. They should extend over a few day range and won’t be cheap, but shouldn’t be ridiculous either. They should cover elements of both advance surveillance as well as protection tactics and of course you should put 500 to 1,000 rounds down range at least. Most of these courses will leave you with a certificate or diploma saying you attended and passed the course and this will be the first thing to highlight and show off about yourself on your resume to an EP firm. However, also don’t sell your decade of experience short. That’s a huge benefit and advantage to you, lots of guys try to get into it without a base level of experience and make rookie mistakes. Your security experience and a credible EP class should get you in the door at most agencies. If ya have problems after taking a course, hit me up and I’ll see who I know for ya.
@@dsk357 oh I'm sorry I thought my comment got posted damnit. So, I'm a felon and cannot get a CCW. I am working in expunging my felony (which no doubt will take awhile) but until then it was recommended to me, that I make myself be as valuable as possible to prospective clientele. So until I get the felony dealt with and can actually go to one of those schools (I'm not sure if any online classes would help me in that?) I have since acquired several certifications such as my TCCC, handcuff, de-escalation, CPR/IED/bloodborn pathogen certifications, along with several FEMA certifications as well. So aside from 10 years of experience in the field (mostly baptisms, parties, horse races, and quinsinetas) and the certifications I don't have much to go off of. Is there agencies I put a resume into? Is this strictly word of mouth? I deeply feel this is a calling much like being s teacher or EMT work and I want to pursue this. If you could give me any pointers I'd appreciate the experienced help. My number is two zero eight, five nine five, nine nine nine seven. If you don't mind reaching out at some point and perhaps helping me with a direction I can send you a copy of my resume layer this evening or something and we can chat. Thank you sir I appreciate the responses :) be safe out there please.
@@tiberious1990 As someone actively in this field full time, that felony charge will be your biggest issue. I believe you aren't legally allowed to work in the armed security field for 10 years minimum after a felony charge. If you can find a way around that, focus on networking. Reach out to other officers you work with and pull information about other companies and future work. IF you can afford it, go to an EP school.
@@tiberious1990FEMA certifications mean jack, nobody is gonna care. Those schools mean Jack too for the most part. EP is all about connections and networking. Don’t even bother with online courses, those especially mean jack. And if you’re a felon you can forget getting into this at all. That’s being blunt, shooting it to ya straight, you likely won’t even get into regular security. States I’ve worked in don’t even let you break into the industry - not even an unarmed security license is issued. And dude….I can’t believe I have to say this, don’t post your number out on open forums for the whole world to see 🤦🏻♂️🤦🏻♂️🤦🏻♂️ PERSEC my friend…
Out of interest, could someone explain to me why 0.40cal is so popular? I prefer a 9mm SIG Sauer P229 for personal security. But I have seen many people opt for 0.40cal.
Personally not a leather guy it is to rigid and heavy, Kydex or ballistic nylon pouches work for me, I would lose one gun and add two more mags, also I would add a tourniquet like a Ratt and a couple of bags of peanuts or some beef jerky because in close protection you will be hungry a lot with no time to eat Also the shoes slip on's are a no go if they get wet they will fail you
You know nothing about EP Perry Ellis belt? That will last about a month and will break at the worst possible time Slip on shoes? Why would you cut the soles? Bostonian shoe company every year has an employee run the Boston marathon in their shoes. So maybe try them Two guns? That’s a lot of weight. Your job is to get your principal out of there not to stay and fight . An asp, spare mags, flashlight, a large knife to “cut a thread”, a monocular in your pocket How do you get in and out of the car? Your cell phone has a clock on it, but sure add a watch for extra weight. Notice he didn’t put this stuff on, because he would look like a tool who could barely move.
I'm secret squirrel! I have a very important principle, me. I'm on a dangerous mission. I'm going to the store. I'm blending in wearing street clothes. My load out is my normal CCW gear. I hope I make it home safe!
Its detail specific. If your position in a more open area where your coverage maybe multiple clients then yes soft ba or even plates. If dealing with one client in a more of a daily actions of daily life no I wouldnt.
You guys actually talk into your sleeve. I thought that was just a Hollywood thing. Aside from wearing a flashing neon sign that says "secret agent man", I can't imagine a more comically obvious way to draw attention to yourself than the sleeve mic. At least use a handkerchief and pretend to blow your nose while you do it.
Two MAJOR NO NO’s to your setup: NO to the shoes…. CIA teaches laced shoes even dress shoes in the event you have to run. Slip on shoes can and will fall off. NO to your belt… Midway USA carries many concealed carry THICK leather belts that come in both casual and dress styles. That belt is FAR TOO THIN especially with all your heavy gear.
@@mrwayne5158it’s way more crap than is necessary and the shoes bit made me facepalm. This guy is incompetent. I wouldn’t take anything this guy says to heart - this is all wrong
slip on shoe? dude you have NEVER been in bad situation. YOUR BELT IS NOT up to the job, have tie with velcro in back of nect loop to rip off. CHEAP ankle holster and ankle holster at all? you are NOT a real PSD guy...
Load out lol. You american make me laugh how you try and make everything tactical and like you're constantly going to war. Come over to the UK and try doing it without weapons!
This videos is underrated. There was a lot of important information in this video that new EPs could benefit from. Thank you!
Never wear slip-on loafers for EP... Always a lace-up shoes. Nexbelt are excellent for EP loadout and are extremely durable. N*EAR makes one of the best minimalist earpieces on the market, super-lite and low-profile.
Thank you!
Yeah first thing I noticed.
Why slip on are not suitable ?
@@harisyoung4110 they will fall off during dynamic motion and quick direction changes .
Remember to always double knot your laces!
Thanks for sharing this, I'm a newbie to the industry and its nice to have this information
Do not do anything this toolbox says
This is an example of incompetence. Don’t take any of this. This is all wrong
go to a hearing aid place and get a custom molded earpiece for that coil so that you can also hear your surroundings and radio.
I understand you don't do this very often but kore essentials has a leather gun belt really nice Belts they have
This is actually a really good video. Thanks for putting out this info. It's definitely a great base for an EPA agent. The only exception that I would take is with that Perry Ellis belt. I never have good luck with that buckle. Every time I load out stuff on it and tighten it up it seems to tear. I go with a uniform dress belt. It's sturdier and they could pass as a regular dress belt. Otherwise great video.
I know this is an old video, but here are my two cents after 22 years in the business. Shoes can be purchased with rubber soles. I'm a very big fan of the shoe brand Allen Edmunds, Oxford with Dainite Rubber Soles. you will spend a bit more on them, but I have shoes that are 10-15 years old.
Would love to see a try on where things are and what it looks like
Comms suggestion: look at ear hero. In-ear speakers abt size of a grain of rice. Able to maintain full SA and no coiled tube above the collar.
I prefer lightweight black leather / cordura approach shoes even with a suit, Eyewear is always prescription shatterproof lens shades.. great video.
I prefere a good heavy lace up shoe. I can run or kick without loosing a shoe.
Brother, I work close protection too and lived your video….spot on!
What model Breitling watch was that?
You are dead on about the glasses Sir.
Your Flash light is huge!
I have the same one it's really small fits in your palm
In colder situations, I would consider ditching one or two pistols for a concealable IIIA vest. You could get one for under $300 and it weighs like 2lbs.
Appreciate the idea but I do already wear a vest. It just wasn’t in the video. Neither was the IFAK I carry. But you’re correct. Thanks bro!
Really great video!! Great setup and information as to why. 💪🏿💯💪🏿 Thankyou!
In ear "FBI style" curly sets are pretty bad for reducing situational awareness (they block up one ear).
The molded style ones are far better if you want to attempt low profile on a budget.
I've always hated the silly 2 wire sets - No one walks around talking into their sleeves unless using one of these sets, so you might as well wear a hi-viz vest with "Look At Me" written all over it.
Get a 3 wire version with separate earpiece, PTT and microphone. The mic goes just inside your lapel and the PTT can be fed through a small hole in your jacket / trouser pocket. This way, you can press the PTT in a less attention grabbing way whilst speaking somewhat normally.
Hold up a phone to your head and no one will be any the wiser, or, have a local shop CNC machine a phone sized piece of plastic to use as a totally disposable "phone" to hold up whilst talking on the radio - If things get exciting, you can simply drop it on the floor without having to fumble putting a $1000 I-phone away.
Your local radio dealer (if they're serious) can wire a socket into the setup to accept a second PTT. They could also supply a large "slap pad" PTT to insert into your breast pocket. In a hands-on situation, you won't have to put your hands into your pockets to activate the PTT, rather you'd simply press your chest.
If a headset has that silly two-pin "Kenwood" plug, it is designed for a toy radio with low capability. Look at the new R7 series from Motorola or the new H series from Hytera - These have VERY advanced audio leveling and noise cancelling features that will help get the message through first time. In radios such as this, advanced encryption is a simple tick box.
What kind of holster are you using for the pulse taser at around the 14:10 mark?? Appreciate the video. Good stuff.
I would like to know this also??
Found it: VlaMiTex B28 Leather Holster Fits Taser Pulse and Taser Pulse Plus a.co/d/246vzMS
Anyone know??
@@erictittle7531Man they are refusing to tell us! It must be classified! Lol
I found the holster, but for some weird reason either UA-cam deleted my response or the gentleman running the page did. lol
I agree about swapable mags, but nobody carries .40. You are better suited to glock 19 on your hip and a 26 on your cankle. Both have swapable mags and any cop will have extra 9mm glock mags. Oh, and never trust your life to kel-tec jam-o-matic. If you need a small sub rock a roni or a glockmag 9mm pistol calibur carbine. Then you have 33 round mags for your pistol.
Garrison type belt! Perry Elis belt can come undone!
No bullet resistant vest? No handcuffs? No tourniquet? Throw all that other stuff away. You need a vest to shield your principal, a firearm, comms, cuffs, and comfortable shoes. You should also have a tourniquet/med kit on you, or within the immediate vicinity, like in the car.
Exactly correct he is not an elite protector he show know it’s the basic gear
When I did EP work and was with principal, I wore a Point Blank 3A vest with Level 4 ceramic inserts and a carbon fiber liner to interrupt TASER or stungun. I carried a G19 with 15 round mag as primary pistol with a pair of 33 round mags for reloads and a snubnose .357 as a backup. Knife was 4" Gerber folder. Usually had pepper spray but no baton or handcuffs as it wasn't my job to stick around and apprehend anyone, but to exfil. I always wore lace-up shoes, typically Bates Oxfords with a non-slip sole and a clip-on tie that doesn't get you choked.
We have crye vest and carry full blow out kits in a go bag that stays near us but most EP don’t carry cuffs because we can’t even legally arrest (even as an off duty officer). Used to carry zip cuffs when working digpro and OCNUS but thats the only time and only used them once.
He has a vest, med gear, and cuffs. He said so on another comments replies. Don’t worry, he’s all gear up!
Those loafers though 😁
Fucking clown shoes
Thank you for sharing! Do you carry any medical gear too?
Definitely, buddy! Always have trauma gear nearby. Some things I just chose not to show off on vid like type of armor, type of med gear, few other things, but yes, always ALWAYS trauma gear and more within reach. Thanks for watching my friend
Won't show med gear but will show weapons....lol
As for a watch would a Iwatch be ok?
You feel the need to carry 3 guns, but no body armor???
Good Suit now a days companies make them with Stretch Materials
1 pistol with Light
1-2 xtra mag with +5 extension
Good Kydex Holster Tenicor safari land
Next or Kore Belt
TQ
Small Ifak
Flash Light
Knife Multi tool
Possibly Asp baton
AirPods
N-ears ear piece
Glasses
Shoes with laces
Clip on Tie
Thank you.
How much money would a detail like this cost?
Loved the video!
What brand is the knife that you had in this video?
It’s a Zero Tolerance 0323. It’s discontinued but you may be able to find one on eBay eventually or a knife forum. Glad ya like it
Good morning, I have been doing Private security for about 10 years now and would like to get further into the EP side of things. Any advice on where to start?
Hey brother. Yes, my journey was sort of backwards to what most people do, but best thing you can do for step 1 is to attend a good credible EP course. They should extend over a few day range and won’t be cheap, but shouldn’t be ridiculous either. They should cover elements of both advance surveillance as well as protection tactics and of course you should put 500 to 1,000 rounds down range at least. Most of these courses will leave you with a certificate or diploma saying you attended and passed the course and this will be the first thing to highlight and show off about yourself on your resume to an EP firm. However, also don’t sell your decade of experience short. That’s a huge benefit and advantage to you, lots of guys try to get into it without a base level of experience and make rookie mistakes. Your security experience and a credible EP class should get you in the door at most agencies. If ya have problems after taking a course, hit me up and I’ll see who I know for ya.
@@dsk357 oh I'm sorry I thought my comment got posted damnit. So, I'm a felon and cannot get a CCW. I am working in expunging my felony (which no doubt will take awhile) but until then it was recommended to me, that I make myself be as valuable as possible to prospective clientele.
So until I get the felony dealt with and can actually go to one of those schools (I'm not sure if any online classes would help me in that?) I have since acquired several certifications such as my TCCC, handcuff, de-escalation, CPR/IED/bloodborn pathogen certifications, along with several FEMA certifications as well.
So aside from 10 years of experience in the field (mostly baptisms, parties, horse races, and quinsinetas) and the certifications I don't have much to go off of. Is there agencies I put a resume into? Is this strictly word of mouth? I deeply feel this is a calling much like being s teacher or EMT work and I want to pursue this. If you could give me any pointers I'd appreciate the experienced help. My number is two zero eight, five nine five, nine nine nine seven. If you don't mind reaching out at some point and perhaps helping me with a direction I can send you a copy of my resume layer this evening or something and we can chat. Thank you sir I appreciate the responses :) be safe out there please.
@@tiberious1990 As someone actively in this field full time, that felony charge will be your biggest issue. I believe you aren't legally allowed to work in the armed security field for 10 years minimum after a felony charge. If you can find a way around that, focus on networking. Reach out to other officers you work with and pull information about other companies and future work. IF you can afford it, go to an EP school.
@@tiberious1990FEMA certifications mean jack, nobody is gonna care.
Those schools mean Jack too for the most part. EP is all about connections and networking. Don’t even bother with online courses, those especially mean jack.
And if you’re a felon you can forget getting into this at all. That’s being blunt, shooting it to ya straight, you likely won’t even get into regular security. States I’ve worked in don’t even let you break into the industry - not even an unarmed security license is issued.
And dude….I can’t believe I have to say this, don’t post your number out on open forums for the whole world to see 🤦🏻♂️🤦🏻♂️🤦🏻♂️ PERSEC my friend…
Shouldn't we be wearing clip-on ties that will break free at close quarters?
Can you help me get in this company as a worker, out in the field
hey man nice video what state you do EP because here in my state in connecticut theres no EP work
You would have to move to areas with a higher number of HNW individuals. New York, Austin, ETC. Otherwise you wont find work.
Awesome
how do you have the suit to be tailored around you what do you do with the jacket and paints anybody had to do th is . please let me know thx
Where do you put Your radio and cell phone?
Great video very informative and thanks for sharing!
Where did you get your holster at for your Glock 22?
No slip on shoes! Never!
Out of interest, could someone explain to me why 0.40cal is so popular? I prefer a 9mm SIG Sauer P229 for personal security. But I have seen many people opt for 0.40cal.
No compact fixed blade knife
I see you went to pwa
How's that muscle memory between a gun with a dumdass dot & no dot?
What radio rid do you operate?
Hello, I am a private investigator. I want to switch to protection agent. How can I start? Thanks.
Mike sits on the inside of your jacket
Personally not a leather guy it is to rigid and heavy, Kydex or ballistic nylon pouches work for me, I would lose one gun and add two more mags, also I would add a tourniquet like a Ratt and a couple of bags of peanuts or some beef jerky because in close protection you will be hungry a lot with no time to eat Also the shoes slip on's are a no go if they get wet they will fail you
How do you find someone to do this for
You first need to get the proper training and then you network between other ep agents to gain high level clients
Your showing off with your watch
Suggestion of gear recommended by secret service would be suspenders to hold up your pants because your gear gets heavy.
No excess magazine in the weapon! Must be sleek and fast!
So what kind of juw are you
You know nothing about EP
Perry Ellis belt? That will last about a month and will break at the worst possible time
Slip on shoes? Why would you cut the soles? Bostonian shoe company every year has an employee run the Boston marathon in their shoes. So maybe try them
Two guns? That’s a lot of weight. Your job is to get your principal out of there not to stay and fight .
An asp, spare mags, flashlight, a large knife to “cut a thread”, a monocular in your pocket How do you get in and out of the car?
Your cell phone has a clock on it, but sure add a watch for extra weight.
Notice he didn’t put this stuff on, because he would look like a tool who could barely move.
Seriously. This is all a wonderful display of incompetence
I'm secret squirrel! I have a very important principle, me. I'm on a dangerous mission. I'm going to the store. I'm blending in wearing street clothes. My load out is my normal CCW gear. I hope I make it home safe!
Sunglasses are too protect you from the sun and some debris
Your monocular is huge! Need compact one!
Dear sir.Do you provide any online training or certificate??
Online training for a practice role😂 surely this question is a scam
LMAO online training means jack. NOBODY is gonna care you took an online course. Online courses have absolutely ZERO credibility.
Sounds like you've learned a lot from your USSS career
So he someone that would work for like the president
👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
What yourTrying to say is that your defensive with offensive capabilities
Everybody knows when your talking into your sleeve!
Hihihihi
😎🇵🇹
Dude those shoes look atrocious! Get some black oxfords!
Switch to 9mm Glocks! 40 s&w is obsolete.
Forgot body armor and ifak.
Body armor is mission dependent. The ifak is definitely something that should always be available.
Its detail specific. If your position in a more open area where your coverage maybe multiple clients then yes soft ba or even plates. If dealing with one client in a more of a daily actions of daily life no I wouldnt.
@@jennamiller3114 If you have a firearm, you have armor. Simple as.
You guys actually talk into your sleeve. I thought that was just a Hollywood thing. Aside from wearing a flashing neon sign that says "secret agent man", I can't imagine a more comically obvious way to draw attention to yourself than the sleeve mic. At least use a handkerchief and pretend to blow your nose while you do it.
Don't think they are trying to hide the fact that they are communicating with others
@Michael Scheidle I mean. You're not wrong, but it definitely depends on your client. If they want you to be invisible. You gotta be invisible.
Yeah that looks much better....keep flashing a big white handkerchief or any other object to your mouth or nose to get noticed. Sounds brilliant.
This was difficult to sit through😂
Two MAJOR NO NO’s to your setup:
NO to the shoes…. CIA teaches laced shoes even dress shoes in the event you have to run. Slip on shoes can and will fall off.
NO to your belt… Midway USA carries many concealed carry THICK leather belts that come in both casual and dress styles. That belt is FAR TOO THIN especially with all your heavy gear.
This is not the way
Its got most of whats required whats the big deal.
@@mrwayne5158it’s way more crap than is necessary and the shoes bit made me facepalm. This guy is incompetent. I wouldn’t take anything this guy says to heart - this is all wrong
slip on shoe? dude you have NEVER been in bad situation. YOUR BELT IS NOT up to the job, have tie with velcro in back of nect loop to rip off. CHEAP ankle holster and ankle holster at all? you are NOT a real PSD guy...
Acronyms for the novice is poor instruction
When does the video start 7 minutes in and he still talking about nothing. Boring
I honestly can’t watch anymore! Carbines -really? Taser really?
Yeah those shoes gotta go my boi, you pull up and pick up a client in those they’ll fire you on the spot
😂 hahaha
Such a "haven't actually worked EP in a long time" video...shoes and belt are cringe. 40 w/ laser...of course. #trustywatch
List:
Ugly black shoes.
Check.
.40 cal?! Ewww...
Load out lol. You american make me laugh how you try and make everything tactical and like you're constantly going to war. Come over to the UK and try doing it without weapons!
Those shoes need to thrown in the garbage sir. 🫵🏼👉🏻