R3 Principal Mark Sanders, along with a team of riders to include our accounting firm LevitZacks, rode in the 25-mile bicycling event which started inside Petco Park, crossed the Coronado Bay Bridge, and then circumnavigated the San Diego Bay to raise funds for local cancer research.
Month: November 2019
Military Working Dog tribute led by R3’s Trevor Maroshek
R3’s Trevor Maroshek speaks at a ceremony in Imperial Beach, CA at the unveiling of a bronze statue in Veterans Park that recognizes the service of military dogs and their handlers. The statue depicts Chopper, a jet-black German Shepard, that was Trevor’s military working dog when he was an active duty Navy SEAL. Trevor helped launch the SEALs’ first canine unit and later started a nonprofit that helps connect veterans with service dogs. Among many of Chopper’s contributions was detecting hidden Taliban forces in Afghanistan in 2010 which prevented a large ambush attack.
After Trevor retired in 2012, he was able to reconnect with Chopper as his service dog, paving the way for other veteran handlers to adopt their canine partners. Chopper died of natural causes last summer but will live on in remembrance with the statue. Trevor continues his service to the nation as an instructor at R3, training EOD forces in mounted and dismounted patrolling, squad tactics and advanced weapons usage.
Click here to read the November 7, 2019 article in The San Diego Tribune
R3’s Ken Normand Guest Speaker at USS MIDWAY event
R3’s Ken Normand, Program Manager for International Military Training, was the guest speaker for a retirement ceremony for LT Jeff Shultz, USN EOD, held onboard the USS MIDWAY museum. Attended by EOD technicians from across the country, the ceremony culminated 23 years of service for Jeff who hails from a long line of veterans. His father is a retired USN EOD Master Chief. Ken relayed a number of “November Sierra” stories about Jeff’s white-hat days and held the audience in both laughter and pride. R3 wishes LT Shultz fair winds and following seas in his new life and thanks him for over two decades of service.