SIG MMG 338 Program Series

Archive for March, 2011

HP White Expands NIJ Testing

Tuesday, March 1st, 2011

HP White, the World’s Largest Independent Body Armor Test Laboratory Gains National Voluntary Laboratory Accreditation Program (NVLAP) Accreditation for its Environmental Conditioning Test Facilities in Support of NIJ Body Armor Certification Regimen

NVLAP has awarded HP White accreditation to the National Institute of Justice (NIJ) 0101.06, Sec. 6 Flexible Armor Conditioning Protocol; fortifying the lab’s existing ISO/IEC 17025:2005 Scope of Accreditation (NVLAP Lab Code: 200825-0). HP White joins a handful of NIJ certified ballistic testing laboratories that can conduct the required environmental conditioning of personal body armor, in addition to the ballistics resistance testing required for NIJ 0101.06 body armor certification.

“Since 1972, HP White has been conducting body armor testing for NIJ and its predecessor the National Institute of Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice,” said Mike Parker, president, HP White. “Through the years HP White continues to evolve its operations with the NIJ programs and customers’ needs. This NVLAP accreditation will provide our customers with more efficient NIJ testing cycles, and faster throughput and market readiness of their products.”

Ok, so now you are saying to yourself, “What does this mean for me?” What it means for you is that HP White is now certified to conduct a protocol “designed to subject test armors to conditions that are intended to provide some indication of the armor’s ability to maintain ballistic performance after being exposed to conditions of heat, moisture, and mechanical wear. This protocol will not predict the service life of the vest nor does it simulate an exact period of time in the field.” This protocol is critical to predicting how well armor will perform in real world conditions. Nobody gets shot in a lab. It’s always in the rain, or bitter cold, or sweltering humidity.

HP White is a household name in the armor world and more testing/certification capacity is good for the market. It means new configurations can be tested more rapidly. This should help shorten the development cycle and encourage competition. Competition in the market place means improved armor and lower costs.

www.hpwhite.com

Level Peaks Catalog

Tuesday, March 1st, 2011

Check out Level Peaks’ online catalog. They sell the best brands and have a few of their own concoctions as well. While there is some great eye candy here the catalog by no means represents their entire range.

Make the jump to check it out. (more…)

SEC Charges Military Body Armor Supplier with Accounting Fraud

Tuesday, March 1st, 2011

According to a Wall Street Journal report the Securities and Exchange Commission has charged Pompano Beach, Fla.-based DHB Industries (now known as Point Blank Solutions) with committing “engaged in pervasive accounting and disclosure fraud through its senior officers and misappropriated company assets to personally benefit” its former chief executive, David Brooks. The SEC separately charged three of the company’s former outside directors and audit committee members; Jerome Krantz, Cary Chasin and Gary Nadelman, saying they were “willfully blind to numerous red flags” signaling the fraud.

In particular, the trio ignored signs that the company was paying for prostitutes as well as other questionable expenses. “In fact, although these payments were discussed at board meetings, these discussions were concealed by omitting them from the official board minutes,” according to claims by the SEC.

It’s been awhile since we have seen anything on this case. Brooks is no stranger to the courts and was previously charged for fraudulently diverting $10 Mil in company funds for his personal use. You may also remember that Steven Colbert picked him as the “Alpha Dog of the Week“. Additionally, Point Blank is currently in bankruptcy court.