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TWAW: Tips to Avoid Getting Abducted

Tips to Avoid Getting Abducted

By Andrea Stump

TWAW Chapter Leader
Sterling, Colorado

On a Sunday in late March 1970, 22-year-old Kathleen Johns packed her infant daughter into a station wagon and left San Bernardino, California to visit her sick mother. Kathleen was also seven months pregnant with the child of her long-time boyfriend. As she travelled on Highway 132 near Modesto, another vehicle pulled alongside the station wagon and the driver appeared to signal that Kathleen should pull over. On the side of the road, the driver explained that the back wheel of Kathleen’s station wagon was loose, but he promised to fix the problem. Instead, unbeknownst to her, he loosened the lug nuts and the wheel fell off as Kathleen tried to drive away. The man then offered to drive Kathleen to a gas station, but she climbed into his car and discovered he appeared to have other plans. She claimed he also made veiled threats to harm her child. Eventually, Kathleen grabbed her daughter and jumped from the car. A passing driver took Kathleen to a nearby police station where she identified the stranger from a police sketch of the Zodiac Killer.

 

Kathleen was lucky. Unfortunately, there are many people who are not so lucky. According to the National Crime Information Center, there were 543,000 people who were reported missing in 2020. Not all of these cases were abductions, but abductions still represented a significant portion of the cases. The majority of these missing people were females under the age of 21.

 

Fortunately, there are many strategies you can use to reduce your chances of being abducted. Here are just a few tips to keep yourself protected:

  • Trust your gut. If something feels suspicious, it probably is.
  • Don’t be complacent. No one thinks they could ever be a victim until they become one. Don’t get lost in your daily routines and ignore your surroundings. Use situational awareness at all times, especially in public places. The three most common places that abductions occur are grocery store parking lots, office parking lots/garages, and public restrooms.
  • Stay off of your phone while in public. Phones impair your ability to pay attention to your surroundings and often can place a target on your back.
  • Walk with a purpose and look confident. Attackers don’t want to attack someone who they think might put up a fight.
  • Be wary of vans, especially ones parked in odd places or ones parked by your car.
  • Don’t pull over on the side of the road if someone is flagging you down. If you feel like there is a valid reason someone is trying to get your attention and you feel like you need to stop, go to a highly populated area to do so and be very cautious.

There are many other things you can do to avoid becoming a victim. At our monthly meeting this weekend we will be discussing some of these things as well as discussing real-life examples of crimes and what we can learn from them. Please join us for The Well Armed Women (TWAW) Sterling chapter meeting on October 16th from 9 am to 11 am at Logan County Shooting Sports complex, 12515 Highway 61/2nd Amendment Way off Highway 61 Sterling, CO.

 

TWAW Shooting Chapters exists to educate and empower women in a safe and non-threatening environment for their effective and responsible self-defense with a firearm. Prospective members are welcome to attend their first meeting before joining. If you would like to become a member, you can join online at www.twawshootingchapters.org.

Women over 18 interested in learning more can contact Jennifer Everhart at twawsterling@gmail.com or visit TWAW Shooting Chapters, Inc. website at www.twawshootingchapters.org.  You can also like us on Facebook @twawsterlingcolorado or stop by Boondocks Army Surplus at 324 N 4th Street in Sterling and pick up a flyer.

Sentinel Voter Guide for Custer County

by George Gramlich,
Commentary
It’s a pretty simple ballot this year for Custerites with only one county contested election but a big, big dollar item is at the end.

Custer County School District:

In the Director 1 slot, Peggi Collins is running unopposed. For Director 5, Tracy Marie Broll is also unopposed.
The one contested race is Director 4 with Alma L. Golden and Jordan Benson as the candidates. (See our interviews of them on page one.) Alma has a grandson attending the school and Jordan has two kids attending. Alma, a former pediatrician and teacher, has spent virtually her entire life in the childhood medical and educational fields, nationally and internationally. Jordan is a parent involved in a lot of local activities including being a Town of Silver Cliff Trustee. Both are qualified to fill the role. Your choice. (Note: EVERYBODY can vote for every Board of Ed Director opening.)

State Ballot Measures:

Amendment 78 (Constitutional): Vote YES on this. Colorado receives a lot of money from the Feds and others, known as “Custodial Money”, that goes straight into the state’s bureaucracy by-passing the state assembly. Thus, our elected officials have no say on how the Denver eunuchs spend this loot. This Amendment changes the process where all Custodial Money goes into a special pot. The General Assembly then decides on how to spend it. This is good. Vote YES on 78.
Proposition 119 (Statutory): Vote NO on this disaster. This one is real bad. It increases the tax on retail pot sales by $137,600,000 a year to fund, yes, programs “for the children”. They give the standard laundry list of the usual socialist child bait programs. The problem is that the proposition creates a totally independent board that will control all this money. Once the initial board is appointed by the governor and his left-wing homies, when a vacancy occurs, THE BOARD ITSELF APPOINTS THE REPLACEMENT! Nobody else can appoint board members so the board, will of course, go rogue quickly with NO OVERSIGHT from the legislature or the executive branch. So the brain surgeons behind this measure want to give over a $100 million to these totally unaccountable lefties every year to, of course, shower “certain qualifying children” (their words not mine,) and “children’s” programs (think perverted sex ed, critical race theory, etc.) with pot money. And parents don’t qualify! A $100 million! This is beyond bad. Vote NO.
A good article on what began as Initiative 25 when attempting to get it on the ballot, can be found here.

Proposition 120 (Statutory): Vote YES on 120. The background is a little complex with the dems in Denver changing some definitions of property that stopped a prior property tax reduction. This corrects those definitions by giving private and almost all commercial property about a 10% decrease in their property taxes. (About time!) Vote YES on 120.

County Ballot Measures:

Custer County Justice Center Sales and Use Tax Ballot Issue 1A: This is the big magilla. Just to review: There has been a county committee working on this for years. They are proposing a new building complex that will house a new courthouse, county jail and Sheriff’s Office plus some county offices. They want to increase Custer County’s sales and use tax by 2% which would bring sales tax in the Westcliffe and Silver Cliff Towns to 9.9% which would be one of the highest in the state. The building cost is about $18 million dollars which the county would get through a projected 25 year bond purchase. The 2% sales and use tax increase would bring in around $1.25 million a year which would result in a payback cost of around $31.1 million. The committee says they can probably get $4+ or so million in grants which would reduce the cost a lot. There is no doubt a new jail and SO offices are needed and we definitely could use a new or updated courtroom. There are issues with possible lawsuits from inmates and the possibility the state will sue the county if a new courthouse is not built. So, it’s a tough call. It’s a ton of money (especially considering the whole county’s budget is around $7 million a year) but there is definitely a concrete need for some changes. So, it’s your call here, citizens.

Local Pastor Runs for School Board In Fremont County

by Mark Bunch/President Royal Gorge Gun Club/Chairman
Fremont County NRA
(Editor/GG: As shown below, Pastor Meagher in Cañon City has decided to run for the RE1 School Board. He has had ENOUGH of the lib policies and admin of that school and has decided to DO SOMETHING about it instead of posting meaningless missives to FoolBook. What have YOU done lately?)
I remember about a hundred years or so ago, when I was a young boy that my parents were very involved in the local PTA. I even attended a couple of those PTA meetings at McKinley Elementary School here in Lincoln Park with my parents and the entire auditorium was full, probably 250 to 300 people. Continue reading Local Pastor Runs for School Board In Fremont County

BOCC Passes Resolution Condemning Baghdad Biden for Treason 

Custer County BOCC Passes Resolution Condemning
Baghdad Biden for Treason
Vote 2-1

by George Gramlich,
News and Notations

-Westcliffe, Colorado

Things got pretty hot, like I mean real hot, at the end of the September 8, 2021, Custer County Board of County Commissioners meeting with childlike temper tantrums, verbal assaults and of course, multiple liberal snowflake meltdowns. But, in the end, it was well worth it as patriotism won and the fascist left lost. Hooah!

The meeting started promptly at 9 a.m. with all three musketeers in attendance: Chair Bill Canda, and members Tom Flower and
Kevin Day. Continue reading BOCC Passes Resolution Condemning Baghdad Biden for Treason 

To Live or Die with one shot…

by Mark Bunch/President Royal Gorge Gun Club/Chairman Fremont County NRA

To be good at anything involves three simple rules that Masters in their chosen field make look simple when really it isn’t. You learn your craft and develop your skill set to the best of your ability. You practice, practice, practice like you would do it. Then you do it, do it, do it like you have practiced it. Simple and easy to remember.
Shooting is no different, you need to learn your craft and develop your skill set to the best of your ability. Breaking that down gives you lots of variables to work on, breath control, trigger control, sight picture alignment and correction, understanding the ballistics pertaining to your caliber and how you as the shooter can affect that. Bone support and natural point of aim, reading the wind and adjusting for barometric changes, focusing on your mission to hit what you are aiming at and ignoring and eliminating every single variable that you possibly can in order to make that one shot.


That’s a lot of pressure to make that one shot so if you want to be able to do that, whether you are hunting that prize elk that finally comes out of the trees 700 yards away from you across that windy canyon… Or you are walking your dog in the park and you and your wife get confronted by a couple of drug addicts wielding knives. You are going to do it like you have practiced it and if you rarely or never practice it you are most likely going to get the same results as the practice you have put into it. Zero practice will net you zero results.
When it comes to using a firearm for self-defense you quite possibly are going to live or die with one shot. If you happen to find yourself in a confrontation against armed assailants, you are going to have to have a better skill set than they do and you had better have honed your skills to a razor’s edge and practiced it repeatedly beforehand. There are no points for second place and when it comes to defending yourself or your family, truer words have never been spoken.

I have been an NRA Certified Law Enforcement Firearms Instructor for over 30 years which seems impossible since I am
only 29, LOL! Over the course of my life I have instructed all sorts of firearm disciplines from handgun to long distance precision rifle classes to literally thousands of students. One of the things that I have learned over all those years is that shooting is a lot like driving. Everyone thinks they do it just fine, but if that were actually true there wouldn’t be any car accidents or accidental shootings. So obviously, that really isn’t the case.


Over the course of my lifetime, I have owned and operated a retail and class 3 weapons dealership and have sold a fair number of guns. One of the things I always asked my customers is what they intended to do with the gun they were wanting to purchase to see if I needed to do an intervention with them first, LOL! One time, a gentleman walked into my store and wanted to know if we had any derringers. I explained that no we didn’t currently have any and then I asked him what he wanted to use it for. He replied that he did a lot of hiking and wanted it for personal protection against mountain lions and bears. After I stopped laughing, I sat the man down and did his intervention. Once I explained the shortcomings of the entire class of derringer-like weapons and pointed out that every derringer every made on the planet had lots of sharp edges on it, he decided he needed a real gun and bought a .45, lol! You never want to shoot anything with teeth and claws with a piece of junk derringer because it might get taken away from you and planted in your behind, LOL! My point in telling Sentinel readers and my gun club members this story is that its ok to not know everything about a subject and to seek out qualified individuals and learn from them. Last summer I bought a welder from a guy to use on some of my farm projects. Well, I have watched people weld things up before, but I had never actually done it myself since I am management, LOL.

Turns out it is more difficult than it looks, so I had to get some instruction from someone more qualified than me. I am always a very good student, especially when it comes to something I don’t know, so at the end of my instruction I had a pretty good knowledge of what I needed to look for and what I needed to do. Then I did what I always do, I practiced until I developed a pretty good skill set
with it.

Training to Survive
How good do you have to be to survive an armed encounter? Simple. You have to be better than your opponent. That sounds straightforward, however, one thing to keep in mind is that your attacker is likely going to have the element of surprise as you were likely minding your own business when the attacker decided to strike. If you have reasonably good reaction time, a typical adult in good shape can start to react to danger in around .9 of a second getting off one aimed shot from drawing from the holster in around four seconds with a developed skill set yet minimal practice. Is four seconds enough time to save your life or the lives of your loved ones? Depends on several other factors. Are you the only target present in the attack, or are you simply a target in a group of targets such as a crowded church or theater? Shooters who have highly developed skill sets with lots of practice fall into the Gun Fighter threshold and can do this in less than two seconds. Both Sam and I are able to draw and shoot two rounds on target
in under two seconds, but we have each probably shot over a million rounds of ammo between us as well.


Can you repeat that feat at 3, 7, 10, 15 or 25 yards in the same time frame as your point-blank performance of approximately four seconds? Can you get consistent A box hits? Probably not if you have minimal training and practice. What happens if you can’t use your strong hand because of injury or surgery? How would you fare if you were to be attacked under those circumstances? Have you ever practiced drawing and shooting your handgun weak handed?
I have said this in previous articles, and I say it again now as it is imperative that it sinks into your consciousness. Once you have developed a skill set with a firearm, it is going to take you at least 50 rounds per month to maintain your original skill set. That doesn’t mean that you are going to improve your skill set, it simply means that 50 rounds per month is the bare minimum to maintain whatever skill set you have developed. That is 600 rounds per year, and 6,000 rounds per 10 years to maintain that 4 second draw and point-blank shot once you perceive there is a threat.
Combat CCW Class
At the Royal Gorge Gun Club Armory we have developed an intermediate handgun defense course called Combat CCW. This class was designed by myself and Sam Tittes, my lead firearms instructor, to help improve the efficiency and confidence level of everyone who already has a Concealed Carry Permit but a minimum of handgun combat training shooting experience or practice. I know lots of people with CCW permits and sadly, for most of them I would be absolutely terrified if I was in a restaurant or theater or church and anything happened and they drew their legally concealed firearm and started shooting, LOL.
The puppy mill concealed carry trainers churn out everyone they possibly can so they can get a CCW permit without knowing a darn thing about safely carrying, deploying and engaging a threat with their concealed carry handgun. I have even had some of their students come to my gun store after completing one of their puppy mill concealed carry classes and ask me to load their gun since they couldn’t figure it out !! Do you really want that guy sitting behind you with his legally carried concealed handgun to pull it out and start shooting at some criminal who is shooting up the theater or church pew you that your family are sitting in?


Hopefully most of you stood up out of your chair and yelled hec no to that question, LOL ! Students who take our Combat CCW class will all be baselined on their shooting proficiency at the beginning of our live fire and then at the conclusion of live fire practice drills and you will see first-hand the benefit of taking our brand-new Combat CCW class. Whatever your skill set is, we will make you better. We will likely run one more of these October 9th, and include a night fire element, engaging running targets, and learning how to clear a house or structure. Price per student is $150 each or $250 for you and management and you will need 100 rounds of ammo each.

Call or come by Lincoln Park Pawn at 135 Elm St., Cañon City, CO. 719-275-3030.

Myron L Mullett Passes

Myron L Mullet

Myron L. Mullett (Buster), age 55, resided in Westcliffe, CO, the past 30 years. He went to be with Jesus on September 1, 2021. He was born in Washington, Indiana, on December 10, 1965, to Enos and Lydia Mullett. On October 17, 1987, he married the love of his life Connie J. (Slabach) Mullett in Goshen, Indiana, and remained married to her for the rest of his days.
Myron was an essential part of his family, his community, and the world. His heart for others and his deep faith in God was seen and felt by all he met. His incredible sense of humor and love for storytelling made him a joy to any room he entered. He was wise, honest and kind. His death will leave a large hole in the hearts of all who knew him.
He is survived by his wife, Connie (Slabach) Mullett and their four children, Esther Mullett, Ben (Karalyn) Mullett, Aaron Mullett, and Thomas Mullett, as well as his parents, Enos and Lydia Mullett, siblings Marlene (Larry) Troyer, Marlin (Becky) Mullett, Patricia (Patrick) Overholt, JoAnn (David) Schlabach, Stephen Mullett, and Ryan (Stephanie) Mullett and numerous nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by nephew Cory Grant Schlabach.
Memorial Contributions may be made at Kirkpatrick Bank Westcliffe CO. 81252, Myron Mullett Memorial Fund.

2 Timothy 4:7
I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith: Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge, shall give me at that day: and not to me only, but unto all them also that love his appearing.

Hanks Open letter to Biden on 9/11

 

Dear Joseph Robinette Biden,

As we reflect on this somber 20th anniversary since the attacks on America, I hope this letter finds you well.  White House staff advised you had no public events today.  I believe that is fitting.

Americans are realizing the severity of the crises we are in.  Many have concluded you are unfit for the office.  Many believe you were fraudulently elected.  I will go further, and declare my belief you are a fraudulently installed agent under the influence of a foreign power.

Whether or not you fully comprehend your situation, Americans clearly recognize those pulling your strings oppose American greatness, leadership, and sovereignty.  We know you aren’t in charge – you’ve repeatedly told us so.  Handlers tell you whom to recognize at press conferences.  They tell you when to take no questions and walk away – no matter the size of the disaster you’ve just caused.

As Americans come to realize your incompetence, a growing majority also recognizes you were not fairly elected.  Evidence of fraud in multiple states supports their conclusions, and more evidence is revealed every day.  Facts are overwhelming the lies.  You once stated your team had developed the most extensive voter fraud network in history.  We believe you, and we clearly observed you needed every bit of it on November 3rd, 2020.  As you may recall, it required five states to stop counting votes in the middle of the night and alter the tallies so you could claim “victory”.  Seven months into this decrepit regime, and that is the only “victory” you can claim.

Your incompetence in Afghanistan is more than enough to warrant your impeachment and removal by the 25th Amendment.  Americans have long known of your amateurish and corrupt foreign policy –

[…]

See pdf to read in full

A Tribute to Myron Mullett

A Tribute to Myron Mullett

Myron Mullett was a unique individual. He was the kindest, gentlest, most generous and compassionate man I ever knew. There are a thousand stories about Myron and they all have a similar tone. I’d like to tell my quick story so that those who weren’t fortunate enough to know him personally can understand why there is such an outpouring of love and such sorrow at his premature passing.
I moved to Custer County in 1995, and had a house built in the Rosita area. Myron installed the septic system and some of the foundation work. I had made a strong point about not wanting ANY trees removed or destroyed during the construction. One night I received this phone call. “Mr. Hess, my name is Myron Mullett. I’m sorry to inform you that while installing your leach field I had to knock two of your trees down. I know you didn’t want that to happen and I’m very sorry but there wasn’t any other way. But I wanted to tell you how bad I feel about it and apologize.” Well, I was stunned. Not about the trees but about the kind of man who would make such a call. Not many would have done that. I knew immediately I wanted to meet him. We quickly became friends, then golf partners and eventually business partners. I believe I was Myron’s best friend. Just like hundreds of other guys believe that too because that’s how Myron made you feel. He made you feel special. He made everyone feel special.
It’s hard to understand why the Good Lord sometimes takes such good people like Myron so early. But some of us know that God has a plan, and that we don’t always understand that plan and that we just need to trust that plan. I am comforted only in knowing that Myron is now in the protective care of Jesus. And that lets me accept this untimely loss that I feel.
Myron had a wonderful way of inspiring all who he came in contact with. He was a man of actions, not words. He was humble, forgiving and polite to everyone. I could never begin to measure up to his standards, but I know just being around him made me a better person. He made all of us better by just being around him. He was such a good role model. He was a great Christian, son, husband, father, patriot, mentor and friend, devoted to and so proud of his wonderful family. He deserved every word that we heard at his eulogy last Monday.
I look forward to renewing my “friendship” one day with men like Chet and Forrest Gompf and Myron in a much better place than this fallen world. That promise is what makes the loss of a loving man like Myron Mullett bearable. Rest in Peace my good friend. I love you.
— Mike Hess

Editor Note:  Family put together a video tribute that can be seen on YouTube.  Click here.