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Jeb Bozarth: How One Veteran Built a Mission-Driven Career

  • Writer: Brainz Magazine
    Brainz Magazine
  • Jul 31
  • 3 min read

Some people retire quietly. Others keep moving forward with a mission. Lieutenant Jeb Bozarth belongs to the second group. After more than 30 years of combined military and law enforcement service, Bozarth took what he learned and built something new: a training company focused on safety, mindset, and preparation.

“I’ve spent my life responding to emergencies,” he says. “Now, I teach people how to survive them.”


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What did Jeb Bozarth do before starting a business?


Bozarth’s career began with a uniform and a call to serve. Raised in a military family, he joined the U.S. Navy after graduating from West Anchorage High School in 1989. He served 14 years as a Seabee Equipment Operator 1st Class and became a Seabee Combat Warfare Specialist. He deployed to Operation Restore Hope in Somalia, Operation Southern Watch in the Persian Gulf, and Iraqi Freedom II and III.


“These were real-world missions. Hot zones. People depending on you to do your job,” Bozarth says. “You learn fast.”


After the Navy, he joined the City of Henderson Police Department in Nevada in 2006. He started in Patrol and worked his way through specialized units like SWAT, the Problem Solving Unit, and the Training Bureau. In 2018, he was promoted to Sergeant, and later to Lieutenant.


“I never chased titles. I just did the work,” he says. “When you show up every day and do your best, things fall into place.”


How did he become a SWAT Commander?


As a Lieutenant, Bozarth led the SWAT team and the K9 Unit. He trained officers in firearms, driving, and defensive tactics. He became known for his cool head and direct leadership. In 2009, he was awarded the Henderson Police Department’s Medal of Valor. In 2023, he was named Supervisor of the Year.


But what set him apart wasn’t just technical skill—it was mindset. “Training is about behavior under stress,” he says. “You don’t rise to the occasion. You fall to your level of preparation.”


That belief shaped his next big idea.


Why did he start critical training solution?


Bozarth retired from law enforcement in 2025—but not from service. He launched Critical Training Solution LLC, a company that teaches civilians, schools, and first responders how to handle violent threats.


“I saw a gap,” Bozarth explains. “Most people don’t know how to react when violence shows up. My job now is to fix that.”


His courses focus on real-world response: Run-Hide-Fight strategies, pre-attack indicators, and stress-tested decision-making. Clients include Touro University, Adelson Educational Campus, TAO Nightclub, and the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority.


Bozarth doesn’t promise hero stories. He teaches preparation. “Survival is about mindset. If you freeze, you lose time. And time matters.”


What makes Bozarth’s Approach different?


Plenty of people offer safety training. What makes Bozarth stand out is experience. He’s not teaching theory—he’s lived it.


“I’ve made life-or-death decisions under pressure,” he says. “When I say something works, it’s because I’ve used it myself.”


He’s also a certified instructor in firearms (FBI/NRA), emergency driving (EVOC), defensive tactics (SPEAR), and incident command. He holds a Nevada Advanced POST Certificate, a B.S. in Criminal Justice, and is a graduate of the Northwestern Police and Command School.


His teaching style is straight to the point. “No fluff,” he says. “Just the facts and how to apply them when it matters.”


What drives him today?


Bozarth is based in Henderson, Nevada, where he lives with his wife Erica and their five children. He’s a parishioner at Saint Francis of Assisi Catholic Church, a fan of the Las Vegas Golden Knights, and enjoys working cattle, hunting, fishing, golfing, and BBQ.


He also supports groups like the Wounded Warrior Project and the Disabled American Veterans (DAV). Service is still central to his life.


“Everything I do now comes from one question: how can I help others stay safe?” he says. “If I can give someone the tools to survive, that’s success.”


What can others learn from Jeb Bozarth?


Bozarth didn’t build a business to get rich. He built it to solve a problem. His career shows that big ideas don’t always start with grand plans—they grow from real experience and a drive to serve.

“If you’ve lived through something and learned from it, you have a duty to share it,” he says. “That’s what I’m doing.”


Whether in uniform or out, Bozarth remains on mission: helping others stay alive by preparing them before danger strikes.

 
 
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