DLK SECURITY & PROTECTION AGENCY

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888-476-6388
101 GADSDEN ST , CHESTER SOUTH CAROLINA Chester, SC 29706
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About DLK SECURITY & PROTECTION AGENCY

FULL SERVICE ARMED OR UNARMED SECURITY OFFICERS AND BODYGUARDS COMPANY.
LOSS PREVENTION OFFICERS/ UNDERCOVER AGENTS/ STORE DETECTIVES.
STRIKE FORCE AND TERMINATION/BUSINESS CLOSING OFFICERS.
CALL US TODAY FOR A FREE PROPOSAL.

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Read The Latest Newsletter from DLK SECURITY & PROTECTION AGENCY

We've just published a new edition of our newsletter! You can check it out on our website and get the latest information from DLK SECURITY & PROTECTION AGENCY. Let us know what you think!

Read It Now Here

We've just published a new edition of our newsletter! You can check it out on our website and get the latest information from DLK SECURITY & PROTECTION AGENCY. Let us know what you think! Read It Now Here Read More

Jul 18, 2009

FBI NOW HIRING LOCALLY !! FREE INFORMATION PROVIDED BY DLK SECURITY

WANTED BY THE FBI
Talented Professionals to Serve the Nation
 
01/05/09  

Collection of images of FBI employees

Attention job seekers: the FBI is looking for a few good men and women to fill a variety of mission-critical roles within our organization.

Well actually, we’re looking for a few thousand—just over 2,100 professional staff employees and 850 special agents, to be precise—in one of the largest hiring blitzes in our 100-year history.

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The reason behind our mega hiring initiative? According to Assistant Director John Raucci of our Human Resources Division, it’s to bring more people on board with skills in critical areas, especially language fluency and computer science. “But,” explains Raucci, “we’re also looking for professionals in a wide variety of fields who have a deep desire to help protect our nation from terrorists, spies, and others who wish us harm.”


To learn more about the array of job opportunities available and next steps in the process, check out our "Inside the FBI" podcast, also available on iTunes, and the latest edition of our FBI, This Week radio program.


All 2,100-plus jobs are now posted on our redesigned FBI Jobs website. The positions are located throughout the nation—in virtually every FBI field office and at our Headquarters in Washington, D.C. You must be a U.S. citizen to apply.

Who we are looking for. According to Raucci, besides those skilled in computers and foreign languages we also need experts in: 

  • Finance and accounting;
  • Security;
  • Intelligence analysis;
  • Compliance and quality assurance;
  • Training and education;
  • Records management;
  • Fingerprint examination;
  • Information technology;
  • Nursing and counseling;
  • Physical surveillance;
  • Electrical engineering;
  • Physical/natural/social sciences;
  • Administrative/clerical processes;
  • Automotive mechanics; and
  • Management/program analysis.

The process. On the FBI Jobs website, take a look at available positions. If you see a job you think you’re qualified for, read our “How to Apply” page and then fill out the online application.

FBI employees in front of computers
Applications will be vetted, and best qualified candidates will be contacted for interviews. We will arrange regional “mega career invitationals” to speed up that process—all selected candidates will gather at designated locations to be interviewed. Those who are ultimately offered a conditional job will be scheduled for their polygraphs, drug screenings, and employment briefings. Candidates who make it past that stage are then ready for the final step—their background investigations.

Our pre-employment background investigations are, by necessity, very thorough and take some time, but we hope to have everyone hired and onboard by September 30, 2009. A hiring initiative of this magnitude requires a massive in-house response to quickly process the deluge of applications we expect to receive, so we’re reallocating personnel who will be dedicated exclusively to this initiative.

If you aren’t offered the specific job you have applied for but still meet the hiring criteria, your application will be kept on hand for possible consideration at a later time.

Interested in becoming a special agent? We also continue to recruit and process agent candidates. Since October 1, we have hired nearly 180 agents and plan to hire a total of 850 by the end of the fiscal year.

Like our professional staff applicants, we’re looking for agent candidates with foreign language fluency (especially in Middle Eastern and Asian dialects) and computer science backgrounds, and also those with skills in certified public accounting or tactics training. And we also need agent candidates with expertise in intelligence, law enforcement/military, engineering, law, and science. Read our Become a Special Agent webpage for more information.

Resources:
- FBI Jobs website

WANTED BY THE FBI Talented Professionals to Serve the Nation   01/05/09   Attention job seekers: the FBI is looking for a few good men and women to fill a variety of mission-critical roles within our organization. Well actually, we’re looking for a fewthous... Read More

Feb 17, 2009

SHAMEFUL ACTS BLOGS

RECIPIENT OF HURRICANE KATRINA DISASTER FUNDS PLEADS GUILTY TO STEALING $60,200

Greenbelt, Maryland - Schewanda Baptiste, age 42, formerly of Waldorf, Maryland, pleaded guilty today to theft of $60,200 in Hurricane Katrina disaster relief benefits, announced United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Rod J. Rosenstein.

According to the plea agreement, from 2003 to November 2008 Baptiste owned a home in New Orleans. She moved from Louisiana to Maryland in the summer of 2005 and rented her home in New Orleans to a woman and her two minor children. Hurricane Katrina made landfall on August 29-30, 2005 in Louisiana, extensively damaging the home in New Orleans and causing the renter and her children to evacuate. Baptiste was in Maryland on August 29, 2005 enrolling her daughter in school.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) provided emergency assistance to victims of the hurricane who were left homeless. It was not a substitute for insurance and was not available to individuals who were not living in homes damaged by the hurricane. Baptiste, in fact, had private insurance which covered the property damage to her home in New Orleans.

On September 13, 2005 Baptiste submitted a fraudulent application to FEMA for disaster assistance relief which falsely claimed that at the time of the hurricane, the New Orleans’s home was her primary residence and that she lived there with her two children. In February 2006, Baptiste submitted a false lease to FEMA in order to obtain further benefits and to convince FEMA that she had been living in New Orleans at the time of the hurricane. She obtained approximately $30,200 in FEMA disaster relief assistance.

Baptiste also fraudulently applied for and obtained $30,000 in grant funds from the Community Development Block Grant which was set up by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to provide disaster assistance.

The renter of the New Orleans’s home properly applied for disaster assistance relief in September 2005. As a result of Baptiste’s fraudulent applications, the renter’s disaster relief assistance application was subjected to greater scrutiny and payments to the renter were delayed.

Baptiste faces a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison, followed by three years of supervised release. U.S. District Judge Deborah K. Chasanow has scheduled sentencing for April 13, 2009 at 2:00 p.m. As part of her plea agreement, Baptiste has agreed to pay restitution for the full amount of the losses incurred by FEMA and HUD.

United States Attorney Rod J. Rosenstein thanked the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development - Office of Inspector General and the Department of Homeland Security - Office of Inspector General for their investigative work. Mr. Rosenstein commended Assistant United States Attorney Sandra Wilkinson, who is prosecuting the case.

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Greenbelt, Maryland - Schewanda Baptiste, age 42, formerly of Waldorf, Maryland, pleaded guilty today to theft of $60,200 in Hurricane Katrina disaster relief benefits, announced United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Rod J. Rosenstein.

According to the plea agreement, from 2003 to November 2008 Baptiste owned a home in New Orleans. She moved from Louisiana to Maryland in the summer of 2005 and rented her home in New Orleans to a woman and her two minor children. Hurricane Katrina made landfall on August 29-30, 2005 in Louisiana, extensively damaging the home in New Orleans and causing the renter and her children to evacuate. Baptiste was in Maryland on August 29, 2005 enrolling her daughter in school.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) provided emergency assistance to victims of the hurricane who were left homeless. It was not a substitute for insurance and was not available to individuals who were not living in homes damaged by the hurricane. Baptiste, in fact, had private insurance which covered the property damage to her home in New Orleans.

On September 13, 2005 Baptiste submitted a fraudulent application to FEMA for disaster assistance relief which falsely claimed that at the time of the hurricane, the New Orleans’s home was her primary residence and that she lived there with her two children. In February 2006, Baptiste submitted a false lease to FEMA in order to obtain further benefits and to convince FEMA that she had been living in New Orleans at the time of the hurricane. She obtained approximately $30,200 in FEMA disaster relief assistance.

Baptiste also fraudulently applied for and obtained $30,000 in grant funds from the Community Development Block Grant which was set up by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to provide disaster assistance.

The renter of the New Orleans’s home properly applied for disaster assistance relief in September 2005. As a result of Baptiste’s fraudulent applications, the renter’s disaster relief assistance application was subjected to greater scrutiny and payments to the renter were delayed.

Baptiste faces a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison, followed by three years of supervised release. U.S. District Judge Deborah K. Chasanow has scheduled sentencing for April 13, 2009 at 2:00 p.m. As part of her plea agreement, Baptiste has agreed to pay restitution for the full amount of the losses incurred by FEMA and HUD.

United States Attorney Rod J. Rosenstein thanked the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development - Office of Inspector General and the Department of Homeland Security - Office of Inspector General for their investigative work. Mr. Rosenstein commended Assistant United States Attorney Sandra Wilkinson, who is prosecuting the case.

Do You Have A Story To Share

RECIPIENT OF HURRICANE KATRINA DISASTER FUNDS PLEADS GUILTY TO STEALING $60,200 Greenbelt, Maryland - Schewanda Baptiste, age 42, formerly of Waldorf, Maryland, pleaded guilty today to theft of $60,200 in Hurricane Katrina disaster relief benefits, announced United S... Read More

Jan 13, 2009

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