You finally got into that concealed carry class you waited so long for only to discover it did not teach you how to use a handgun. Now what?
It should be understood that ‘concealed carry classes‘ do NOT teach handgun use, handling or firing. For the most part, they only teach the State laws pertaining to the carrying of firearms and other weapons and where you can and cannot carry a weapon in the state of Florida.
Contact us for complete firearms training:
Concealed carry: Basic & Advanced
Pistol: Basic & Advanced
Shotgun
Rifle
Home Defense
Active Shooter
Church Guardian
For complete class information, dates and times, and to register for this class, go to:Register For A Class
The cost of our 5-hour, handgun training / concealed carry qualification class that includes one hour of instructor led, live-fire range training that trains you to safely handle and fire a handgun:
$60 – You provide your own handgun and ammunition $90 – We provide a defensive caliber handgun and 50 rounds of ammunition
The cost of our basic, minimum standards 3-hour, concealed carry class: $35 All materials included. There are no hidden costs. Completion of this class qualifies the participant for applying for a Florida concealed carry license. (No firearm training included in this class.).
In-Gauge of Polk County’s Active Shooter Training
In-Gauge of Polk County’s Active Shooter Training
In-Gauge of Polk County’s Active Shooter Training
In-Gauge of Polk County’s Active Shooter Training
In-Gauge of Polk County’s Active Shooter Training
In-Gauge of Polk County’s Active Shooter Training
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Polk County, concealed carry, gun permit, leadfeather, gun license, focused fire, gun training, Winter Haven, Lakeland, lead feather, shooting lessons
We train you to defend your life and the lives of your loved ones.
What qualifies you to carry a deadly weapon in public?
With having a concealed carry weapons license also comes responsibility. Being qualified to carry a deadly weapon in public involves more than just having a card in your wallet.
There is a reason we train more Florida concealed carry license holders than any other entity in Polk County and most likely more than all others combined.
We have students travel from, as far away as, Naples and Fort Lauderdale to the south and Pensacola and Jacksonville to the north. And, from out-of-state, Texas and Georgia. There is a reason why.
Others may conduct “concealed carry” classes, but we train you to use a firearm to defend your life and the lives of your loved ones. All our firearm training classes qualify the participant for applying for a Florida concealed carry license.
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Polk County, concealed carry, gun permit, leadfeather, gun license, focused fire, gun training, Winter Haven, Lakeland, lead feather, shooting lessons
Ours is more than a concealed carry class. We train you to defend your life and the lives of your loved ones.
If you think all there is to carrying a deadly weapon in public is knowing how to pull a trigger, take a class conducted at a gun show, pawn shop or in a rented hotel room.
If you want to learn how to carry and use a handgun to defend your life and the lives of your loved ones, enroll in one of our either basic or advanced handgun training classes.
When you are serious about defending your life and the lives of your loved ones, In-Gauge of Polk County should be your only consideration for concealed carry and handgun training.
Our next available, comprehensive, 5-hour Handgun/Concealed Carry License Qualification Training Class is
This class teaches you how to use your handgun. This class includes 1 hour of live-fire range training under the direct supervision of certified NRA instructors. You will fire a minimum of 50 rounds of ammunition. Successful completion of our 5-hour concealed carry class qualifies the participant for our advanced level, Active Shooter Defense – NRA Defensive Pistol class.
The cost of this 5-hour handgun/concealed carry license qualification training class is $60.
You can register for any of our classes, on our website at: REGISTER FOR A CLASS.
If you have any questions, do not hesitate to contact us.
In-Gauge of Polk County teaches you how to use your firearm to defend your life and the lives of your loved ones. There is no substitute for NRA firearms training.
One trained, good guy with a gun could have stopped the one bad guy with a gun.
FACTS – What is known . . .
Incident duration: >58 minutes
Fatalities: 10
Victims:
Ages: 20 – 65
Genders:
Male: 4
Female: 6
First victims: 2 victims (1st victim – Neven Stanisic and 2nd victim – Kevin Mahoney) shot in parking lot outside King Soopers
Gun used: Ruger AR-556 pistol
First shots fired: 2:30 PM
911 calls received: 2:33 PM
Scene secured: 3:28 PM
Suspect Assailant:
Ahmad Al Aliwi Al-Issa
Age: 21
Marital status: Single
Nationality: Syrian
Immigrated to the U.S. in 2002
Residence: Arvada, Colorado
The assailant went on a 9 minute, unopposed shooting spree.
Officer Eric Talley was the last fatality.
The terrifying hour as employees and shoppers hid when a gunman went on a shooting spree at a Colorado grocery store
BOULDER, Colo. — A gunman opened fire at a grocery store in Boulder, Colo., on Monday afternoon, killing 10 people, including a police officer, the authorities in Boulder said.
The police said that they had taken a suspect into custody after the shooting. That person was injured, the authorities said. Videos showed a handcuffed man being escorted from the building by officers, shirtless and with his right leg appearing to be covered in blood.
People inside the grocery, King Soopers, described a harrowing and chaotic scene inside the store.
“I thought I was going to die,” said Alex Arellano, 35, who was working in the meat department at King Soopers, in the South Boulder area, when he heard a series of gunshots, then saw people running toward an exit near his department.
The authorities identified the officer who died as Eric Talley, a 51-year-old who joined the department in 2010. Officer Talley was the first to respond to the scene when reports of a gunman came in, the police said.
“He was, by all accounts, one of the outstanding officers at the Boulder Police Department and his life was cut far too short,” said the Boulder County district attorney, Michael Dougherty.
Dean Schiller, who posted a live video from the scene shortly after the shooting began, said he heard about a dozen shots and saw three people who appeared to be wounded — two in the parking lot and one inside the supermarket.
As officers secured the building, more than a dozen people were led out of the supermarket, a King Soopers in a residential area a couple of miles south of the campus of the University of Colorado. The grocery store usually draws a mix of families and college students.
In Mr. Schiller’s video, gunshots could be heard coming from inside the store, with officers gathering at the entrance.
Over a loudspeaker, police officers called to the scene could be heard saying, “The entire building is surrounded, you need to surrender.”
“Come out with your hands up,” the officers said. Dozens of police officers and dozens of vehicles descended on the scene.
Newlyweds Quinlyn and Neven Sloan, both 21, had stopped into the store to pick up supplies for beef stroganoff when they heard the shooting. Ms. Sloan, a student at the University of Colorado, Boulder, said that at first she didn’t know what the noise was.
The couple had split up in the store — he was in produce, she said, and she was standing in front of the dairy case — when customers began running.
“It was muffled at first,” she said, “and I thought maybe someone had dropped something, but then it went again, probably about 15 to 20 shots, really fast. My husband came up and shoved me out the door, and yelled, ‘Call 911!’ Then he ran back in to make sure a couple of older ladies who were in the aisles got out OK.”
Sprinting across the parking lot, she said, she took cover behind a building, to be joined minutes later by her husband. Only then, she added, did they look down and realize that, because they hadn’t bothered to use a cart, they had fled with their arms full of the meat, noodles and sherry they had intended to buy.
“These were people going about their day, doing their food shopping, and their lives were cut abruptly and tragically short,” Mr. Dougherty said. “I promise the victims and the people of the state of Colorado that we will secure justice.”
— Bryan Pietsch, Will Wright, Neil Vigdor, Erik Vance and Shawn Hubler ‘The shots are getting closer.’ Witnesses recounted moments of terror, inside and outside the store.
Alex Arellano, 35, was working in the meat department at King Soopers when he heard a series of gunshots, and then saw people running toward an exit near his department.
“The shots are getting closer,” he recalled. “I’m thinking of my parents, and I was freaking out.” For a while, Mr. Arellano said he and two other men hid in the department. He did not see the assailant but could hear the gunfire.
“We were scared cause, you know, there’s entry points where that individual could show up,” he said. “I thought I was going to die.”
Mr. Arellano and the other men eventually escaped through an exit in the back of the building, he said.
Sarah Moonshadow was at the checkout with her son, when she, too, heard shots fired.
“We ducked and I just started counting in between shots, and by the fourth shot I told my son, we have to run,” she said. As they were running, two shots were fired in their direction, she said.
When they made it outside, they saw a body lying in the road.
“I can tell that he wasn’t moving,” she said. “And so, I’m pretty sure he was gone. And I just broke down across the street. I just couldn’t believe we were able to make it across.”
Ms. Moonshadow moved back to Boulder, her hometown, from Denver after she became concerned about Denver becoming unsafe. “This isn’t how Boulder is, you know,” she said. “This isn’t what happens here.”
Taylor Shaver, who works at Art Cleaners, a dry cleaning and laundry business near the supermarket, said that she heard at least 10 gunshots and saw people running from the grocery store.
“I’m in the bathroom hiding,” Ms. Shaver said. “I heard this loud boom. I instantly knew. There was a ton of shots. My stomach dropped.”
Ms. Shaver, 18, added that it was particularly unnerving because it was her first day working alone at the dry cleaning business. She said she had left the bathroom to see what was going outside the business.
“Oh my gosh, you can see all these people walking with their hands up,” she said. “I’ve never seen this many police officers in my life.”
Jordan Crumby, a student at the University of Colorado at Boulder, was about to get a tattoo with the word “warning” on her hip at Auspicious Tattoo, a shop across from the grocery store, when the shooting began.
Ms. Crumby, 31, said she stepped outside to record a video of the scene for her Instagram feed, when the police waved her away. Officers with tactical gear and rifles could be seen swarming the shopping center. People from the grocery store, she said, were being evacuated.
“They had their hands over their heads and they’re getting escorted out,” she said. “I said, ‘We should probably go inside.’”
Kevin Daly, who owns a restaurant and brewery in the shopping center, said he was inside, readying his business for reopening after the pandemic when his manager, in a bank across the parking lot, heard the gunshots.
“Someone saw the livestream, so we pulled it up and locked ourselves in the office,” he said, the start of an hourslong ordeal in which he and his employees periodically opened the door to shelter traumatized witnesses to the shooting.
“The guy just went in there and started shooting,” he said. “People were just in shock. A lot of them had seen bodies and carnage.”
Mr. Daly said he didn’t know who the victims were “and I don’t know what happened in the grocery store, but I do know that it is easier to get a gun in this state than it is to get a driver’s license or to vote.”
FDACS closed its concealed carry permit application portal at the start of the pandemic. (Editorial comment: In Florida, it is alicense not a permit.)
March 17, 2021
A bill to force the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services to keep a concealed carry permit application available online is on its way through the committee process after passing its first House panel Wednesday.
That’s in response to when the department, under Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried, took down its concealed carry permit application portal on March 23, soon after the COVID-19 pandemic reached Florida. That portal remained closed for nearly three months while the Agriculture Department faced lawsuits from gun rights groups over the closures.
The move came after Gov. Ron DeSantis recommended state offices temporarily close to the public beginning March 19.
Local law enforcement agencies and tax collector offices throughout the state largely suspended fingerprint services. Halting those services left first-time concealed weapons permit applicants unable to obtain fingerprints from those providers, according to the Agriculture Department. That would have forced the department to issue refunds, which it legally cannot do.
The House Civil Justice and Property Rights Subcommittee voted 10-6, along party lines, to advance the bill.
Bill sponsor Rep. Blaise Ingoglia did not mention Fried, the lone Democrat elected to a statewide office in Florida, while outlining his bill (HB 1343). But he confirmed the effort was in direct response to the closures.
“The reasoning for [the department] closing down the portal was saying that you could not get fingerprints at the time, which was absolutely not true. You could have gotten it at any sheriff’s office,” Ingoglia said.
“By showing that you could do this same thing online as you could do by paper shows that they took it down arbitrarily,” he told the committee. “That’s what we’re trying to stop. We’re saying you have to keep going continually.”
The right to bear arms is a constitutional right, stressed Ingoglia, a Spring Hill Republican. Yet other portals remained open during the concealed carry permit stoppage.
Democratic Rep. Mike Gottlieb, a criminal defense lawyer from Davie, said he saw the justice system come to a halt at the beginning of the pandemic. Sheriff’s offices and local police departments were not allowing face-to-face contact, preventing fingerprinting, he insisted.
He said he didn’t believe the bill was unnecessary, noting he has a concealed carry permit himself. However, he considered the effort an overreach and “much ado about nothing.”
“This was a very trying time for everybody in society, and to speculate that they took it down for a nefarious reason to deny people their opportunity to have a concealed carry permit is really, I don’t think, our mission here,” Gottlieb said.
In a statement to Florida Politics, Fried called the bill “overreaching, unnecessary and as wasteful as the failed lawsuit filed by fringe activists.” She also highlighted the “record-high” 400,000 licenses issued or renewed last year despite the pandemic.
“State law doesn’t allow us to refund applicants who don’t complete the process, including their fingerprints,” Fried said. “Because fingerprinting was largely unavailable during the pandemic, including from local law enforcement and tax collector offices, we made the responsible decision to temporarily suspend the online portal to prevent frustration from applicants.”
Fried added that the department never stopped processing applications it did receive.
“If Rep. Ingoglia really wants to help improve concealed weapons licensing, he could start with legislation to help us refund applicant fees, instead of politically-motivated bills that are a non-solution in search of a non-existent problem.”
It’s not the first attack the Republican-controlled Legislature has launched against FDACS since Fried took control. Last year, the House voted to strip the department of the Office of Energy and to move it back to the Department of Environmental protection, where it rested until 2011. Fried called that effort, backed by DeSantis, a “partisan power grab.”
Ingoglia’s bill next heads to the House Agriculture and Natural Resources Appropriations Subcommittee. Estero Republican Sen. Ray Rodrigues‘ identical version (SB 1882), filed late last month, awaits its first hearing. The legislation would take effect in July.
Taking a concealed carry class is not the end of your gun training. It is the beginning.
You finally got into that concealed carry class you waited so long for only to discover it did not teach you how to use a handgun. Now what?
It should be understood that ‘concealed carry classes‘ do NOT teach handgun use, handling or firing. For the most part, they only teach the State laws pertaining to the carrying of firearms and other weapons and where you can and cannot carry a weapon in the state of Florida.
Contact us for complete firearms training:
Concealed carry: Basic & Advanced
Pistol: Basic & Advanced
Shotgun
Rifle
Home Defense
Active Shooter
Church Guardian
For complete class information, dates and times, and to register for this class, go to:Register For A Class
The cost of our 5-hour, handgun training / concealed carry qualification class that includes one hour of instructor led, live-fire range training that trains you to safely handle and fire a handgun:
$60 – You provide your own handgun and ammunition $90 – We provide a defensive caliber handgun and 50 rounds of ammunition
The cost of our basic, minimum standards 3-hour, concealed carry class: $35 All materials included. There are no hidden costs. Completion of this class qualifies the participant for applying for a Florida concealed carry license. (No firearm training included in this class.).
In-Gauge of Polk County’s Active Shooter Training
In-Gauge of Polk County’s Active Shooter Training
In-Gauge of Polk County’s Active Shooter Training
In-Gauge of Polk County’s Active Shooter Training
In-Gauge of Polk County’s Active Shooter Training
In-Gauge of Polk County’s Active Shooter Training
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Polk County, concealed carry, gun permit, leadfeather, gun license, focused fire, gun training, Winter Haven, Lakeland, lead feather, shooting lessons
In celebration of Women’s History Month, In-Gauge of Polk County is conducting a FREE ladies only, pistol cleaning clinic.
The recent surge in gun sales has resulted in a great many new gun owners who have no idea how to safely and correctly clean, care for and legally store their new firearm.
Also, recognizing women are accounting for the largest number of first time gun owners, In-Gauge of Polk County is offering FREE ladies only, pistol cleaning clinics.
This is a practical, hands-on, training clinic for the new or experienced shooter who wants to learn the safe and correct way of cleaning a handgun.
Bring your new or dirtiest handgun (revolver or semi-auto) and learn the safe and correct way to clean it.
All equipment and materials provided or bring your own.
Presentation topics:
The safe handling of a firearm
The disassembly (takedown/field stripping) of a pistol or handgun
The correct selection of cleaning materials
The correct method of cleaning a pistol or handgun
The reassembly of a pistol or handgun
The safe and legal transportation and storage of a firearm
Practical, hands-on cleaning session:
Field stripping your firearm
Cleaning your firearm
Reassembling your firearm
Lubrication of your firearm
Securing your firearm for transport
No license (permit) is required for participation in this training clinic. Complete instructions for the safe and legal transportation of your firearm will be provided following your registration and before the day of the clinic.
This is a practical, hands-on, training clinic for the new or experienced shooter who wants to learn the safe and correct way of cleaning a handgun.
Bring your new or dirtiest handgun (revolver or semi-auto) and learn the safe and correct way to clean it.
All equipment and materials provided or bring your own.
Presentation topics:
The safe handling of a firearm
The disassembly (takedown/field stripping) of a pistol or handgun
The correct selection of cleaning materials
The correct method of cleaning a pistol or handgun
The reassembly of a pistol or handgun
The safe and legal transportation and storage of a firearm
Practical, hands-on cleaning session:
Field stripping your firearm
Cleaning your firearm
Reassembling your firearm
Lubrication of your firearm
Securing your firearm for transport
No license (permit) is required for participation in this training clinic. Complete instructions for the safe and legal transportation of your firearm will be provided following your registration and before the day of the clinic.
Not all concealed carry classes are alike. We train you to defend your life and the life of your loved ones.
If you think all there is to carrying a deadly weapon in public is knowing how to pull a trigger, take a class conducted at a gun show, pawn shop or in a rented hotel room.
If you want to learn how to carry and use a handgun to defend your life and the lives of your loved ones, enroll in one of our either basic or advanced handgun training classes.
When you are serious about defending your life and the lives of your loved ones, In-Gauge of Polk County should be your only consideration for concealed carry and handgun training.
Our next available, comprehensive, 5-hour Handgun/Concealed Carry License Qualification Training Class is Saturday, March 20th. Participation is still available. This class teaches you how to use your handgun. This class includes 1 hour of live-fire range training under the direct supervision of certified NRA instructors. You will fire a minimum of 50 rounds of ammunition. Successful completion of our 5-hour concealed carry class qualifies the participant for our advanced level, Active Shooter Defense – NRA Defensive Pistol class.
The cost of this 5-hour handgun/concealed carry license qualification training class is $60.
You can register for any of our classes, on our website at: REGISTER FOR A CLASS.
If you have any questions, do not hesitate to contact us.
In-Gauge of Polk County teaches you how to use your firearm to defend your life and the lives of your loved ones. There is no substitute for NRA firearms training.