SECURITY & TACTICAL ADVISOR Volume 1 November 2013 | Page 37

I remember standing in my ground floor apartment in broad daylight when I noticed a group of armed men quickly exiting two jeep type vehicles moving towards my building. Just as I called out to my girlfriend whom was upstairs putting away our laundered clothes to warn her of the impending danger, the door to our apartment came crashing in. Six men in ski masks with M16 rifles came systematically through the doorway. I had to make a very fast decision at that moment in time; either I was going to go for my .45 that was tucked in my waistband and at least take a few of them with me or I was going to take my chances and hope they would not just shoot me immediately and take my girl. At the moment they came through the door I was standing in close proximity to them and realized they could have easily shot me as they moved through the door, but they did not, so I decided the best course of action at that moment was to submit. And so I complied with their commands to get on the floor on my knees with my hands clasped on my head. As I sat on my knees mind racing for answers and coming up with only questions, there was an eerie silence that fell over the room that seemed to last for minutes. That silence was quickly broken when my woman raced down the stairs to see what happened. She too was instructed to get down on her knees. One of the men stood over me and told me to put my hands behind my back and they then duct taped them together. Almost as quickly as these men breached my domain, they now had me on my feet pushing me with the muzzle of their rifle out the door. My only solace at that instance was that they left my girlfriend alone in the apartment as they moved me into one of the vehicles. So there I was taken by insurgents, thinking how ironic this situation is, having spent years as a kidnap & ransom consultant. As the vehicle sped away, my thoughts drifted to my team of shooters. Judging by how the grab went down and the fact that they did not kill me immediately, I knew they either wanted something from me, or they were going to interrogate and torture me. In either case, it meant I had a little time to figure a way out. Normally we were the ones to be called in to execute the hostage rescue. I knew my team would come for me, but the big question looming in my mind at that moment was, “will it be in time”? I remember being physically thrown into a dark room with a dirt floor. I still had a hood on my head so I was unable to see, and my hands were taped. I knew at that moment, if I were going to live, then it would be up to me to save myself. 37