16
WHAT THE BLOODY HELL AM I DOING HERE?
BY DAMIEN BUCKWELL
How many times had I
asked myself the question, ‘What the bloody hell am I doing here?’
God only knows. These days, however, I don’t need to ask that
question as much as I used to. Going from operations to
administration and then into training over a 12-year period means
that I now have something of a luxury ride. Monday-to-Friday hours,
holidays with the kids and only the occasional weekend interruption
when courses are on or we are undertaking professional development
with our trainers, clients, etc.
My venture into the world of security and close
personal protection has been an eventful one – nothing spectacular
or heroic, but a steep learning curve nonetheless. And my
experience in a multitude of security activities over 12 years has
led me to where I am today. I give lectures, write training
materials, design e-learning content and undertake a whole host of
educational tasks related to delivering training for the purposes
of being issued a security licence in New South Wales,
Australia.
Twelve years ago, you probably wouldn’t have bet
two bob on me making it through in one piece, let alone getting to
where I am today. Well, I am here to tell you that you should have
bet the farm on me – you’d be filthy fucking rich by now!
It all started in 1995. I had just finished a stint
working as a pathology courier, driving around to doctors’
surgeries, picking up pathology materials and taking them back to
the labs. On the return trip, I would drop off the results. Anyway,
long story short, shit happened, and I took my then employer to
court for allowing me to be potentially exposed to pathogens. The
union was as weak as piss and didn’t defend me, even though I had
photographic evidence. I went on stress leave and eventually left
the job, and the missus and I ended up moving from the sunny
northern beaches of Sydney to a place two hours north on a lake. It
was a beautiful spot, but there was one big problem: I had no
fucking job. Great!
I applied for roughly 300 jobs of varying types:
delivery driver, office clerk, sales rep – hell, I even applied to
sell bloody cars! No takers what so bloody ever. Not a single call
back. The arseholes didn’t understand common decency.
By that point, I was pretty much all at sea, and I
decided to try an advert for security-officer training. If only I
had known then what I know now. I rocked up keen as mustard, ready
to be the best I could be – sound familiar, anyone? – but I was
dismayed to find that I had to fill out reams of paperwork over the
course of two days and then sit an exam. Struth, I had been charged
up to throw people around and be all Starsky and Hutch on a
brother’s ass, but instead I found that I had to do schoolwork. I
mumbled under my breath as I found a seat near to someone whom I
considered to have equivalent bodily hygiene and prepared myself to
be dazzled by the lecturer’s renditions of cop-type stories.
It turned out that the lecturers were in fact
actual cops, from the robbery squad of all places, moonlighting at
the weekends as instructors. It also became apparent that it was an
open-book exam in which you could check the answers. If you could
read, you would pass, so to speak – unless you were a complete
stargazer!
After passing the exam, I was given a
serious-looking certificate that I took to the cop shop, where I
filled out some more forms, and, voilà, I was licensed to
work. I had a choice of licensed categories I could apply for:
static guard, armed guard, bodyguard or bouncer. I figured what the
hell and ticked all the boxes. And that was that. I was licensed
after just two days’ textbook training. I had no practical
instruction and no experience, yet I could legally offer my
services to provide the licensed activities listed above! Luckily
for me (and for the rest of the free world), I wasn’t satisfied
with just two days’ theory and began a quest to find mentors in the
business to teach me how the job should really be done.
My search wasn’t always successful. Being something
of a rabbit caught in headlights, I was taken for a ride by some
bastards, but overall I met and learned from some very switched-on
people, many of whom I am honoured to have known, let alone worked
with.
At one point, it got to the stage that I had six
different uniforms in my car, and I seemed to be continuously
wearing a duty belt (fully equipped with holsters, handcuffs and
all the ‘works and jerks’), a firearm, dark blue pants, black shoes
and a T-shirt. I’d get a phone call and be told what uniform to put
on, and off I’d go into the blue yonder. Seven days a week,
twenty-four hours a day, day in, day out. I loved it. I was doing
everything a boy could wish for: working with ‘stars’, doing all
sorts of covert stuff, getting mentored by the best of the best and
loving it. However, there were many occasions when I thought I was
centre stage in a Frank Spencer show but still managed to walk away
as the ‘hero’.
I remember my first cash-in-transit job. It was a
typical day. I was at my boss’s house, all tarted up but with no
place to go, when another guard dropped round. We started to have a
chinwag, as you do, when lo and behold the phone rang. It was a
job: two armed guards were required to transport a consignment of
cash from a vault in one bank to another vault in another bank. It
sounded simple enough. So, after taking no notes during the
briefing, my newly acquired buddy and I jumped into his car and
made our way to the job, which was about 40 minutes’ drive
away.
As we were driving along, we got into some serious
chinwagging, and it turned out that we shared the same birthday and
had similar hobbies. (He was a pom, but I didn’t hold that against
him.) Anyway, while we were gasbagging away, both of us forgot what
we had been told in the briefing – neither of us could remember the
name of the bank we were supposed to go to. The only thing I could
remember was the letter of the alphabet that the name of the bank
started with. So, when we arrived in the town, we went to the first
bank we saw that started with that letter.
Let me set the scene for you: it was 5.45 p.m. on a
Friday afternoon, and the bank was closed but the staff were still
on site. We knocked on the door. We were dressed in full uniform,
complete with ID and guns, looking a million dollars. A member of
the staff asked if they could help us, and we responded by saying
that we were there for the ‘job’. The woman looked at us in a
puzzled fashion and then said, ‘Come in and we’ll sort this out.’
The bank was an old one with no screened counters, and the vault
was open. There was money as far as the eye could see. The woman
told us to wait and went off to speak to someone. When she
returned, she told us that no one knew anything about our job.
‘It’s all right, love,’ I said. ‘I’ll call the boss and see who
stuffed up.’ We were then escorted out of the front door and back
onto the footpath, where I got on my mobile and rang my boss.
‘Boss, we are here at Bank X, and they reckon they
know nothing about our job.’
‘No fucking wonder, brainiac. You’re at the wrong
fucking bank.’
I experienced a sudden constriction of my bowel
muscles as I anticipated my boss jumping out of my phone and
kicking me in the arse. An abrupt disconnection awoke me from my
stupor, and we both hurried to the correct bank to start the real
job, which was now behind schedule by 45 minutes after we had
dicked around in the wrong location to begin with. It could only
get better, right? Wrong.
We arrived at the correct bank this time and walked
into a branch that was obviously moving, given the boxes and
packing material lying around. A very attractive young lady (or so
I thought) was on the other side of the counter, folding perforated
cardboard packing boxes into shape. ‘I see you have spent time
working at McDonald’s,’ I said, trying to be all that. It was then
that I noticed her lapel badge: ‘Branch Manager’. Aw shit, not
again. How many more screw-ups could I make? Plenty, as it turned
out.
The branch manager gave me a stern look and said,
‘Where’s the strongbox?’
‘And what strongbox is that?’ I replied.
‘The one you are going to use to carry the contents
of our safe up the street to the other bank?’
‘Oh, that strongbox.’ Nobody had told me anything
about a fucking strongbox. ‘We’ll simply use one of your McDonald’s
folding boxes,’ I said, suddenly realising what was coming out of
my mouth.
‘OK,’ she replied.
The safe was then opened and its contents piled
into a box. Anyone who tells you money isn’t heavy is a liar. About
$400,000 in cash, cheques and other valuables was to be
transferred, and we got ready to walk to the other bank, which was
about 800 metres up the street.
‘How are we going to do this?’ the manager
asked.
‘Well, we’ll go first, and you can follow at a safe
distance.’
‘OK.’
I looked at my partner, and his face told me that
he had never done this before either! As we walked out of the front
door of the bank, some space opened up between us and the manager,
and I said to my mate, ‘If anyone comes within 20 metres, give ’em
the stare. If they come within ten metres, rest your hand on the
butt of your firearm and give ’em the stare. If, after all that,
they are still coming towards us on a mission, shoot the
fuckers.’
He agreed that my suggestion sounded reasonable,
and we continued on our way. As luck would have it, we arrived at
the other branch without any issues whatsoever and surrendered the
box to the new safe for storage. Job completed, we both exited
stage left and returned to the car. The ride home was somewhat
quieter than the ride up. Eventually, we both looked at each other
and burst out laughing.
As a footnote to that tragedy, the branch manager
actually rang my boss and raved on about how cool, calm and
collected we were and that we’d done the most professional job she
had ever witnessed from security guards. If only she knew.
My next big adventure brought me into contact with
the dizzy heights of stardom and arguably the biggest celebrity of
them all: Tom Cruise. It was during the filming of Mission:
Impossible II in Sydney that I had one of the funniest cock-ups
of my career, although it actually turned out brilliantly. In fact,
there were several cock-ups, and not all of them turned out too
brilliantly, come to think of it.
I received a call from a guy I knew who told me to
get my sorry ass down to Sydney for some high-paying work doing
crowd control on a movie set. I grabbed another mate, and we ended
up working on the periphery of a shoot in The Rocks precinct of the
city.
During the filming, Tom and Nicole were apparently
splitting up or something, but don’t quote me on that – I ain’t a
columnist. Anyway, word came down that no paparazzi were allowed
anywhere near the shoot. My mate and I were at our assigned posts
when we heard the head bodyguard screaming on the radio about a
‘pap’ photographer with a telephoto lens, taking shots from the
hill just above us. The guard assigned to that location said that
there was nothing he could do, as it was public space. The head
bodyguard was seething. We decided to head up and see what was
happening. My mate was tall – about six feet seven inches or more –
and when we arrived on the spot he walked in front, around and
underneath the camera to block the photographer’s view – it was
hilarious. The photographer sure as shit pissed his pants, because
he took off at a great rate of knots. Victory was ours.
Shortly after that, the bosses started to migrate
towards us to see who we were and what our story was. We then
started to get the cushier jobs and better hours, including
overtime rates, because it was obvious that we could do the job
effectively and legally. This was uppermost in the film people’s
minds, what with the publicity and all.
My first fuck-up happened out the front of a
government building they were filming in. They had a movie prop in
the form of a sculpture out in front. It was fenced off, and my job
was to look after it. One morning, a police security officer from
the government building came wandering down to have a look at the
sculpture. ‘Excuse me, officer,’ I said. ‘I can’t allow you past
this point.’
‘You what?’ she growled.
‘I am sorry, but I cannot allow you past this
point,’ I replied. I have never seen such a shade of purple and red
before, and the steam coming out of her ears was
breathtaking.
‘Do you know who I am?’ she screamed.
‘Yes. It says on your badge that you are a police
security officer,’ I replied without emotion.
Out of nowhere, the set manager arrived. ‘What
seems to be the problem here?’ she asked sweetly. I was lucky she’d
shown up, because in another second I reckon the police security
officer would have probably shot me or eaten me whole.
‘I am sorry,’ the set manager cooed, ‘but he is
following very strict instructions.’ The police security officer
mumbled something or other under her breath as she wandered off,
escorted by the set manager to the café cart that had just
appeared. This thing was a fucking cake shop on a trolley with
everything you could wish for. But we weren’t allowed to touch it,
as security was not catered for.
Later that night, the feeling of us versus them (us
being security and them being the ‘filmies’, the people wearing
tool bags and carrying gaffer tape, running around madly making
Hollywood happen) was broken down a little. A filmie was struggling
to push a trolley full of stuff up a steep street, and I saw him
and gave him a hand. Apparently, up until that point the guards
hadn’t lifted a finger to help, so this guy was very grateful, and
he introduced me to the people I needed to know. As a result, I
soon got to know who was who as far as the filmies went. In terms
of food, water, coffee, toilets, etc., I went straight to the head
of each queue and got permission for security to have access rights
to catering and the like. In exchange, we made arrangements for
lines of communication to be set up to assist the caterers and the
other site suppliers with access issues and deliveries. I had gone
from a guard standing next to a generator five miles from the
action to a ‘get things done’ guy who knew all the right people.
However, I still got rotated through shitty locations and posts,
mainly because none of the others could do the job properly, and
the job still had to be done.
One night, I was standing at a shitty position
doing access control. It was cold, exposed and I had been dealing
all day with bloody tourists with cameras asking, ‘Where Tom
Clooooze?’ I was tired and feeling a tad flat. Out of the blue, the
head bodyguard came down and said to me, ‘Tom is driving himself to
the set and will be coming through here shortly. Don’t cause him
any grief. Just let him through without any fuss or hoo-ha.
Understand?’
‘Righto. No problem,’ I said.
One of the filmies came rushing past with his ID
badge out, and I gave him a wave. A bit later, a couple of lost
tourists asked me what was going on, and I told them to move over
the road to the viewing area. Then, another filmie came past, so I
gave him a wave, too. I then noticed a guy at the bottom of the
hill walking towards me. He was wearing a baseball cap, which was
partially covering his face. Alarm bells started going off in my
head, because he was exhibiting signs of being some dodgy bastard
out to knock something off or steal anything not nailed down. To
make matters worse, he was sticking to the shadows. Taking into
consideration my earlier briefing, perhaps it wasn’t a surprise
that I saw a dodgy bastard – not a megastar trying to be low
key.
The dodgy-looking bloke finally made it up to the
checkpoint and tried to come past. I asked him where he thought he
was going, and he told me that he was going onto the film set. I
moved in front of him. ‘Excuse me, sir. Do you have your Photo ID
handy?’ I asked.
‘They didn’t give me one,’ he replied.
People will try anything to get into a movie set,
so I wasn’t buying this guy’s story for a second. ‘Well, mate,
you’ll have to move over there to the visitors’ viewing gallery.
Thanks.’ I pointed in the direction of the viewing gallery and was
just about to say, ‘What part of “fuck off over there” don’t you
understand?’ when the guy tilted his face a little, allowing the
light to shine on it. Fuck me. It was Tom Cruise, mega fucking
star, known the world over, and I was giving him fucking attitude
because he didn’t have a photo ID badge. In my defence, he was
considerably shorter in the flesh than his publicity photos
suggested.
About 20 minutes later, the head bodyguard came
down to my position. ‘Was it you?’ he asked. Considering I was the
only fucker at the post, I couldn’t lie. ‘Um, yes, it was.’ I had
visions of receiving my DTUM (don’t turn up Monday) notice. But the
head bodyguard was pissing himself laughing. I presumed he was some
sort of sadistic prick, getting his kicks from sacking me. ‘What’s
so funny?’ I asked.
‘Well, Tom appreciates the fact that with almost 50
grand a day being spent on this film, security is so tight that
even he can’t get in without photo ID.’ I was waiting for the
punchline, but it didn’t seem to be coming. ‘We’ll talk some more
tomorrow, but well done.’ Say What? Well done? It turned out that
Tom was happy not to be recognised and had a chuckle over it.
That incident meant that I went from doing menial
jobs to being responsible for coordinating set lockdowns during
filming. I would rush around with two headsets on separate channels
and another mike pinned to the lapel of my jacket on another
channel. The two headsets were tuned to security and the filmies,
and the lapel one was for my ‘response squad’, which would deal
with shit if and when it happened. This position gave me the
opportunity to talk to the crew, including John Woo, the director
of the movie, and I loved every minute of it. At the same time, I
always ensured that the guards got fed, rotated and looked after as
best as could be expected on such a job. The hours were long, and
you were on your feet all day. It could be very boring, but you
still had to do your job.
I got some offers of further movie work at the end
of the filming, which I was very grateful for, but I declined
because of the distance I would need to travel. Nonetheless, I did
have fun on that movie set!
Not every job I did was like a scene out of the
Keystone Cops, and one in particular will stay with me for
the rest of my life. I was sitting in my boss’s office one day when
a call came in requesting two armed guards as soon as possible. It
wasn’t often that we were told to expedite our arrival at a site,
but this was no ordinary job. My boss and I responded to the call
and made our way over to the Department of Community Services
building. Upon arrival, we were greeted by people who looked very
relieved to see us. As we sat down for a briefing, a senior police
officer arrived with a folder. What I was about to become involved
in would change my whole outlook on life.
The police officer asked us about our firearms and
what our status was. I had a Smith and Wesson 9 mm semi-automatic
handgun, which held sixteen rounds, and two spare clips, which held
fifteen rounds each. It was a beautiful piece of equipment. My boss
was old fashioned in his tastes: his was a Smith and Wesson .357
Magnum with two spare speed-loaders. I had seen him empty that
beast faster than a guy with a Glock semi-automatic and have good
grouping at distance. The policeman expressed satisfaction with the
equipment and our abilities – we were both members of a pistol club
and practised after work on mock buildings with man targets and
training rounds. It was the best we could do, given the lack of
access to more sophisticated facilities as civilians. I’d always
figured that if I was going to carry a gun, I had better be damn
sure I knew what, when, how and why . . . and then
some. I’d trained with blockages until I knew the motions like
clockwork, improved my draw motions and learned the value of
maintenance. I was confident and knew that I could face a situation
and rely on muscle memory as a natural reflex. I’d grown up with my
dad’s old .22 bolt-action rifle and knew what constituted
responsible behaviour around firearms, so I guess this was just
further training with a different type of tool.
The police officer then told us the reason for our
attendance. In a nutshell, a guy with a drug habit who lived with
his missus and three kiddies had run up a lot of bad debts, and no
one would sell to him. His particular choice of slow death was
amphetamines, more commonly known as ‘speed’. He’d told his missus
to go out and get some for him, but she’d said no, so the gutless
freak had poured lawnmower fuel over the three kiddies and
threatened to set them on fire unless she did what he’d told her.
Somehow, calm had been restored, and the kiddies had survived. It
was at that point that Community Services had got involved,
rescuing the kids and sending them to a safe house. The gutless
freak had then rung up the Community Services office and told them
he was going to kill everyone in the office. That’s when we’d been
called.
The policeman continued with the briefing by
informing us of the following:
- Of all the local nutters, scumbags and criminal trash, this guy would actually carry out his threats and possibly take hostages.
- He was making serious attempts to get his hands on firearms.
- Given his drug addiction and increased paranoia, he would not back down should a confrontation involving ‘use of force’ arise.
- He had a large knife and machete collection.
The policeman then added that if this psycho
entered the premises and had any objects in his hand we were to
‘aim for centre body mass’.
‘What the bloody hell am I doing here?’ I thought.
‘Fuck, I knew I should have done the lunch run.’
We spent several weeks playing cat and mouse with
this freak, and we ended up having to get vests, as he’d apparently
acquired a shotgun and bragged about it to someone who’d spilled to
the police, who then told us. The situation was becoming more
dangerous, but complacency was starting to set in with the office
staff we were protecting. They would congregate in the car park in
full view, making them easy targets. One day, I lost my patience
with one group who were having a laugh and completely forgetting
what was going on. I asked them several times to move into the
safety of the building, but they didn’t pay any attention to me. I
was getting pissed off, as I didn’t want them to be exposed like
this, given what I knew. In the end, I politely advised them that I
wasn’t wearing a bulletproof vest as a fashion accessory but
because a nasty man was threatening to kill them all. As much as it
may have been harsh, I achieved what I needed: them out of the line
of fire.
After approximately six weeks, we had a meeting to
discuss whether we should stand down, as nothing had happened and
the enormous cost of having us there was impacting on the
department’s budget. This meeting took place on a Wednesday night.
It was decided on the Thursday morning that we would stand down on
the Friday night and simply be on call if required. On Thursday
afternoon at about 5.45 p.m., freak boy was arrested five blocks
from the site. He had consumed numerous grams of speed, armed
himself with countless knives and was on his way to the office to
carry out his threat of killing all the community workers. Two
things led to his arrest. One of his friends had seen us at the
office, kitted up and looking the biz. When he’d asked someone
about us, he’d been told that we were under orders to ‘shoot to
kill’ and we had laser sights and stun grenades – pure shit,
really. The friend then went back to freak boy and told him all
this bullshit in front of freak boy’s mother. When freak boy tooled
up and headed for the office, his mother rang the cops, because she
figured that we would kill him outright, based on the bullshit
she’d heard from the friend.
It took five police officers to take him down and
restrain him. When they got him back to the police station, he
raved like Charles Manson about how he was going to do this and
that. He ended up doing time and getting his comeuppance in jail
for the drug debts and for what he had done to his kiddies.
Scumbag.
I have one final story to put another grin on your
dial. I once did a close protection job for a gay businessman who
owned a nightclub and had lots of money. Now, I don’t really care
which side of the bed your slippers are on – just don’t think you
can put them on mine. Only Mrs Buckwell gets to shag me, lucky
thing, or maybe some nymphet who has come backstage for autographs.
However, each to their own is my point of view.
My brief was simple: if he picked someone up, I was
to go back to the hotel (I had a separate room!) and make sure his
wallet wasn’t rolled. Anyway, we were in a nightclub, and there was
very little smoke around, as most gay people are health freaks of
some kind. My client decided that he was going to light up his
pipe. The stuff stank – and I smoke! He was in the middle of the
dance floor, trying to be a 20-something in a 50-something body,
and started puffing out his rancid pipe stench everywhere. I knew
it wasn’t going to be a pretty ending, and sure enough a massive
cross-dresser walked up and knocked the pipe flying. The client
grabbed me and said, ‘What are you going to do about that?’ He
stank of alcohol and tobacco.
‘We’re leaving,’ I said.
‘Why?’
‘Because you’ve made a lot of people unhappy, and
there is only one of me.’
With that, he sheepishly walked outside, hailed a
cab and handed me a wad of notes. ‘I won’t need you any further
tonight. I am going home to grow up.’ His cab took off, and I never
saw him again. I reckon I spent at least the following 20 minutes
pissing myself laughing.
BIOGRAPHY OF
DAMIEN BUCKWELL
Damien Buckwell, based in New South Wales,
Australia, has been in the security industry more years than he
cares to remember. He has been a part of the Intercept team since
mid 2004, providing a complete range of training services for the
security industry. He is currently studying for a Bachelor of Arts
in security, terrorism and counter-terrorism. Contrary to what he
has led you to believe, he really does like the English and sings
‘God Save the Queen’ every night before going to bed.
You can contact Damien at
damien@intercepttraining.com