Seminar topics include home, automobile, phone, technological, travel and personal security.
Retired Range Master Training Sgt. and parole officer Kharis F. Sepulveda will present ‘Refuse to be a Victim’, a seminar that promotes awareness and prevention of criminal confrontations, at Cross Keys United Methodist Church on May 18.
Seminar topics include home, physical and travel security, mental preparedness, workplace violence, self-defense training, personal defense devices and psychology of criminals.
Participants are presented with a variety of common sense crime prevention, personal safety strategies and devices they may integrate into their daily lives.
The course will be held in Faith Hall at 7 p.m., and last approximately three to four hours. The event is open to the public — both males and females, as well as children ages 14 and up, are welcome to attend.
“Refuse to be aVictim” was developed in 1993, in response to requests from women nationwide for crime prevention seminars. In 1997, the program became co-ed. With over 1,000 instructors nationwide, seminars have been presented in 50 states and the District of Columbia. More than 26,000 men and women have benefited from the program’s message. The program is not a firearms or self-defense class.
The cost is $15.00 per person. For more information, or to register, contact Donna Stephan at (856) 881–8788 or at [email protected], by May 1.
Cross Keys United Methodist Church is located at 1644 North Main Street in Williamstown.