Law Enforcement & Peace Officer Training

Personalized Officer Coaching & Scenario Review

“Could that have gone better?”

This is the most common question asked by officers at the start of a session.

Officers often replay difficult encounters after the fact: a resistant subject, a failed control attempt, a rushed entry, a bad angle, a distance-management problem, or a moment where the situation became more dangerous than expected.

Our private coaching sessions give law enforcement and public-safety professionals a discreet training environment to review the physical and tactical elements of an encounter and improve future performance.

We focus on:

  • body mechanics

  • distance and angle

  • leverage and positional control

  • weapon awareness and retention concerns

  • ground survival and recovery

  • emotional regulation under pressure

  • communication and decision-making under stress

These sessions are training-focused, not legal reviews. We do not determine whether an incident was legally justified, within policy, or compliant with agency procedure. Instead, we help officers identify what they could train, adjust, or understand better for the next encounter.

Advanced Arrest & Control training

For officers who want more advanced insights into arrest & control training, we offer LEO-exclusive classes that cover a variety of situations.

Designed for encounters involving resistant or non-compliant subjects, this training emphasizes control, positioning, and decision-making skills that may help officers create safer outcomes when force is necessary.

You’ll use leverage and sound body mechanics to neutralize size advantages and move with maximum efficiency. We teach practical entries and rapid exits from inevitable ground situations so you can regain positional control quickly.

You’ll also develop awareness of body language and awareness of positioning, visibility, and public perception in environments where body-worn cameras, surveillance cameras, and civilian video may later shape how an incident is evaluated.

Training addresses practical questions officers commonly face, including, “What if a subject is on drugs and doesn’t feel pain?” or “What if I am attacked with an edged weapon?”.

CURRICULUM INCLUDES:

• Tactical Body Mechanics

• Risk-Reduced Arrest & Control

• Weapon Retention

• Team Arrest Tactics

• Leverage & Mechanical Advantage Principles

• Neutralizing Size Advantages

• Ground Transitions: Entering/Exiting with Multiple Attackers

• Considering Civilian Video Surveillance

This training is supplemental and skill-development focused. It does not replace agency policy, legal instruction, POST-certified training, or department-approved use-of-force procedures.

Letter of Recommendation

Prior to training with Andrew, I had to rely more on higher levels of force to control violent suspects. Andrew taught me how to gain compliance more rapidly while dealing with aggressive/assaultive uncooperative suspects.

I would highly recommend Andrew’s training to any of my fellow law enforcement professionals.

—Craig Kelly, a peace officer in the Ventura County area

Frequently Asked Questions

  • No. LEO group classes are restricted to sworn officers, peace officers, qualified public-safety professionals, and approved agency personnel.

    That allows the class to address arrest-and-control, weapon retention, subject-control problems, and job-specific scenarios without modifying the material for a general civilian audience.

  • Yes, but it should be understood as supplemental skill development, not a replacement for agency policy or department training.

    We focus on principles that carry over well under pressure.

    The goal is to help officers move better, make cleaner decisions, and have more options when a situation becomes physical.

  • Private sessions are handled with discretion. We do not publicize who trains with us, discuss private coaching sessions with others, or share an officer’s training concerns without permission, unless required by law.

    That said, this is not attorney-client privilege, therapy, or an official agency review.

    For that reason, private sessions are kept focused on training, peace of mind, and future performance.

    We are not here to determine whether an incident was legally justified, within policy, or right or wrong.

  • A single session can help identify problems, introduce better mechanics, and give an officer more clarity and peace of mind.

    We have seen regular training over a six-month period produce meaningful improvement in physical encounters.

    Our training is not built around filling time with unnecessary drills. We work on the specific problems an officer needs to solve, and we stay with a concept until it is understood and can be applied.

    For most officers, a practical starting point is one or two private sessions per month.

  • Private training varies and can be 60, 90, or 120 minute sessions.

    The best way to find pricing for your needs is to contact us with a brief summary of what you’re looking for.