We have years of training and experience.

F.I.I.D. is a veteran owned and operated company

Our team brings a unique blend of experience—military, federal and local law enforcement, martial arts, and firearms instruction—each discipline complementing and enhancing the others.

F.I.I.D. operates effectively in any environment: rural, urban, commercial, industrial, or residential—whether in vehicles, on foot, at fixed locations, or in dynamic, changing environments.

Today’s security environment requires a small, agile, innovative force capable of exploiting concealment.

Agent discreetly observing a crowded urban street from a shaded corner.
Agent discreetly observing a crowded urban street from a shaded corner.

Our counter-surveillance efforts are based on the training and experience we have in conducting team surveillance missions. We know the techniques and tactics of team and individual surveillance so we have the unique viewpoint to detect and document possible hostile surveillance encounters.

Counter-surveillance and covert protection units augment and integrate with existing security programs and procedures. This will enhance and improve any executive protection or security program.

The modern security situation in the United States is complex and alarming. News reports of mass shootings, political assassinations, or some sort of horrible violent crime seem to be everyday. We have complex problems like border security, drug trafficking, mass migration, adversarial nation states, transnational criminal organizations, international and homegrown terrorist groups, and organized crime to name a few (Homeland Security Office of Intelligence and Analysis Homeland Threat Assessment 2025). Crime and security remain a major problem in the United States, and a divisive political climate only adds to the current situation. We are dealing with a constantly changing landscape that requires new proactive approaches to ensure safety and security. Being proactive means actively looking for threats instead of waiting for them to attack so we can defend. By identifying hostile actions in the planning phase we can identify threats and disrupt their activities before they have finalized plans and initiated an attack.

Paying attention is not enough. You need to know what to look for and what to do when you see it.