Ken Adair
Your employees will learn techniques of survival from an experienced street cop. He will guide you through the history of some of the most prolific shooters of our times. The results of ballistic testing on classroom and office furniture will be revealed giving you a better understanding of what you’re up against. Employees will get an inside look at what it takes to survive a horrendous event such as a workplace shooting. You can survive! Protect your employees with this valuable training.
Ken Adair is a 1972 graduate of the Lexington-Fayette Urban County Division of Police Academy, as well as the Kentucky Department of Justice Police Academy. Serving as a police officer for 11 years, Ken was the recipient of several awards. In 1975 he received the Professional Service Award and in 1979 he received the Professional Esteem Award from the Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government. He joined the Federal Bureau of Investigation as a Special Agent in 1983. Upon leaving the Bureau, he returned to Lexington, Kentucky to become the Director of Public Safety at Transylvania University. In 1991 Ken was awarded the distinguished Service Award by (CIKCU), the Council of 21 Independent Kentucky Colleges and Universities. He later became Director of Public Safety for the Sullivan University Systems, Lexington Campuses and has completed 17 years as a Director of Public Safety for educational institutions. During this time, Ken developed several programs, one which has received national attention as well as several other countries. One such program is “How to survive against an active shooter in the classroom” and the other is “Ballistic testing in the classroom.” These programs are the foundation for this presentation and an active blog on the subject. The information learned has been requested by over 250 colleges and universities from Canada to Australia.
As a professional police officer he was assigned as a training officer for new officers coming out of the academy. He was assigned to the extended merit step program for senior officers that decided to stay on the street because of their experience. He assisted the Commonwealth Attorney’s office in their community relations program designed to teach safety to the citizen’s of Lexington. He has also completed professional training in Terrorism and Violence in the workplace, through the F.B.I. and Eastern Kentucky University.
Ken received his Bachelor of Science degree in Criminal Justice and Art (double major) in 1980 from Eastern Kentucky University. In 1994, Ken returned to Eastern Kentucky University to work on a Bachelor of Education degree in teaching and in 2003 attended Sullivan University to study computer programming. Ken’s training and experience include areas such as Major Crime Investigations, Fatality Investigations (Northwestern University), Hostage Negotiations, Advanced Firearms Instructor, Penal Code, Traffic Law and Criminal Law.
As a patrol officer on the street, he was involved in dispatched calls involving weapons and found himself on the wrong end of a gun on several occasions. He has worked high profile cases involving murder and international drug trafficking, as well as everyday street crime. He credits quick thinking and staying calm for staying safe during his career as a law enforcement agent. During his 27 year career as a law enforcement agent, Ken has provided executive protection for then U.S. Vice-President George Bush Sr., U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, Princess Margret and her entourage, Lou Dobbs of CNN, and a Russian Cosmonaut defector to name a few.
Contact: kadair@asresearchcenter.com

…………..Bullet Blocker
ASRESEARCHCENTER
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