![]() |
|||||||||
|
Meet Roland Ouellette Roland Ouellette is President and Founder of MOABŪ Training International, Inc., one of the nation's leading training organizations that specialize in management of aggressive behavior training. Since 1983, he has been providing training and consulting services to numerous corporations, law enforcement organizations, security, academic, healthcare, military and federal agencies. Over 4,000 national and international agencies have benefited from his work. Mr. Ouellette brings over 30 years of experience as a trainer in the fields of law enforcement, military, corrections, private security, and healthcare. He has taught courses and lectured on Use-of-Force to law enforcement, military, corrections, and private security groups throughout the United States, Canada, Australia, Russia, Trinidad, Switzerland, and England. He is a retired lieutenant from the Connecticut State Police Department, served in the Army Security Agency, was a supervisor for the Connecticut Department of Corrections, and was an adjunct faculty member teaching law enforcement and security courses at Naugatuck Valley Community Technical College. He is well known for his development of the "Management of Aggressive Behavior" (MOABŪ) program and is the author of the book, "Management of Aggressive Behavior." He is also a contributing author of the highly acclaimed book, "Total Survival" and the co-developer of the Oleoresin Capsicum Aerosol Training (OCATŪ) program and manual. He served for nine years as the New England Director of the American Society of Law Enforcement Trainers (ASLET), is a member of the Editorial Advisory Board for Performance Dimensions Publications and Security Management Bulletin, and has authored numerous articles on managing confrontations. He has presented at the American Society for Industrial Security (ASIS) Annual Seminars in St. Louis, Atlanta, and New Orleans. He has also provided training in "aggressive behavior" and "use of force" for members of ASIS chapters in Maine, North Carolina, Michigan, New York, California, Delaware, Washington DC, and Connecticut.
|
||||||||