Presence that protects. Without the firepower.
Vetted, uniformed officers trained in de-escalation and customer service. For environments where the wrong officer costs you a tenant, a guest, or a contract, and the right one becomes part of the property's identity.
Unarmed work looks easier than armed. It isn't. An unarmed officer has to talk a situation down without the implied authority a firearm carries, then write a report that holds up if the incident keeps escalating. That requires a different kind of training, a different kind of person, and a different kind of supervision.
Four environments where presence is the product.
Unarmed security is most of what gets bought in the security industry, and most of what gets bought badly. These are the environments where ASP officers are sized to fit, trained accordingly, and supervised on-site.
Apartments & HOAs
Residents see the officer more than they see the property manager. The wrong hire creates complaints, turnover, and lawsuits. The right one becomes the reason tenants renew and recommend the property.
- —Gate & visitor management
- —Patrol & welfare checks
- —Resident-facing communication
Office Buildings & Corporate Campuses
Tenants, vendors, contractors, deliveries, and the occasional uninvited guest all pass through the same lobby. The officer is the first impression of the property and the last line on after-hours access.
- —Access control & badging
- —Vendor & delivery screening
- —After-hours building security
Retail & Hospitality
Shopping centers, restaurants, and hotels need security that deters theft and disorder without making customers feel watched. The hardest part of retail security is staying invisible until you're needed.
- —Loss prevention support
- —De-escalation focus
- —Parking lot patrol
Schools & Private Events
Private schools, campuses, weddings, conferences, and private gatherings need officers who keep the environment calm. Visible enough to deter, friendly enough to be approachable, and trained for the moment that's neither.
- —Visitor management
- —Crowd flow support
- —Family-friendly presence
What an unarmed officer can actually do.
Most clients hire unarmed security with a vague sense of what the officer is empowered to do. Most security firms don't correct the assumption, because it's easier to sell when the limits stay fuzzy. Here are the limits, in writing, before you sign anything.
Observe & Report
The core function. ASP officers document what they see, communicate it clearly, and escalate to property management or law enforcement when a situation crosses the line. Most incidents end here, by design.
Verbal De-escalation
Officers are trained in scripted and adaptive de-escalation techniques. The goal is never to win the conversation. It's to lower the temperature long enough for the right resolution to become possible.
Defensive Use of Force
Unarmed officers can defend themselves and others from imminent physical harm, within the bounds of Maryland self-defense law. They are not trained or authorized to detain, restrain, or pursue beyond what defense requires.
Calling Law Enforcement
When a situation requires arrest authority, criminal investigation, or force beyond defensive limits, ASP officers contact local law enforcement immediately and stand down until officers arrive. We tell clients this clearly, before contract.
The same standard. Armed or not.
Every ASP officer, unarmed or armed, completes the same internal training program and is equipped with the same reporting and communications standard. The full curriculum lives on the main Services page.
See the full ASP standard →