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Rising U.S. Threats Amid Iran Conflict

Rising U.S. Threats Amid Iran Conflict

By Frank Costa, President, Nexgen Protection Services — Rising U.S. Threats 

The evolving Iran-region conflict is no longer a distant geopolitical issue—it is actively shaping the threat environment inside the United States.

According to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), ongoing tensions have created a heightened threat landscape, with increased risks spanning both cyber and physical domains. Pro-Iranian cyber actors and hacktivist groups are expected to conduct attacks against U.S. networks, ranging from disruption to more targeted operations. 

At the same time, DHS warns of a more unpredictable danger: individuals or small groups within the U.S. who may become inspired by overseas events. These actors can mobilize quickly, often without direct coordination, making them harder to detect and prevent. 

Recent large-scale strikes in early 2026 have only intensified these risks. Cyber incidents linked to Iran-aligned groups and rising concerns about retaliatory activity highlight how global conflict increasingly translates into domestic exposure. 

For businesses and security leaders, this shift is critical. The line between international conflict and domestic risk is thinner than ever. Organizations must strengthen cyber defenses, monitor threat intelligence, and prepare for a broader spectrum of potential incidents—from digital disruption to ideologically motivated violence.

The takeaway to rising U.S. threats is clear: geopolitical awareness is now a core component of enterprise security strategy. What happens overseas can—and increasingly does—impact operations at home.

Reference (APA):
U.S. Department of Homeland Security. (2025). National Terrorism Advisory System Bulletin: Summary of the threat to the United States.

#SecurityThreats #CyberSecurity #RiskManagement #HomelandSecurity #ThreatIntelligence #BusinessContinuity #NationalSecurity #CorporateSecurity #Geopolitics #2026Trends

Border Security Risks Are Rising in 2026

Border Security Risks Are Rising in 2026

By Frank Costa, President, Nexgen Protection Services

Boarder Security Risks

Violence near the U.S.–Mexico border is escalating in ways that demand urgent attention from businesses, security leaders, and policymakers alike.

Criminal organizations are no longer relying solely on traditional tactics. Increasingly, they are deploying advanced methods—such as drone-dropped explosives and improvised explosive devices (IEDs)—to expand their reach and capabilities. These developments signal a shift toward more sophisticated, asymmetric threats that were once largely confined to conflict zones.

For organizations operating in border states or along key supply chain corridors, the implications are serious. The security risk is no longer isolated—it has the potential to spill over into U.S. communities, impacting personnel safety, logistics, and overall business continuity.

This evolving threat landscape requires a more proactive and intelligence-driven approach to security risk assessment. Companies should reassess risk exposure, strengthen coordination with local and federal authorities, and ensure that their security partners are equipped to respond to emerging, high-impact scenarios.

Preparedness is no longer optional—it’s a strategic necessity.

Reference (APA):
Congressional Research Service. (2025). Mexico: Organized crime and drug trafficking organizations.

#BorderSecurity #RiskManagement #SecurityThreats #ExecutiveProtection #BusinessContinuity #CorporateSecurity #SupplyChainRisk #SecurityIndustry #ThreatIntelligence #2026Trends

Security Trends in 2026 You Can’t Ignore

Security Trends in 2026 You Can’t Ignore

Frank Costa, President, Nexgen Protection Services

As 2026 unfolds, the security industry is undergoing a major shift—and businesses that fail to adapt may find themselves exposed in ways they didn’t anticipate.

Three trends are redefining how organizations approach protection:

First, demand for executive protection is surging. With a 28% increase, safeguarding C-suite leaders and high-profile talent is no longer optional—it’s a critical layer of risk management in an increasingly unpredictable world.

Second, compliance requirements are tightening across states like California, Texas, and New York. Navigating multi-state regulations is becoming more complex, making it essential to partner with a fully licensed provider that understands the legal landscape and ensures seamless coverage.

Third, expectations around response times have fundamentally changed. Clients are no longer satisfied with reactive services. They expect proactive strategies, real-time intelligence, and rapid response capabilities. The difference between reacting to a threat and preventing one can define outcomes.

The bottom line: security is no longer just a service—it’s a strategic function. Businesses that prioritize proactive, compliant, and comprehensive protection will be better positioned to navigate the risks ahead.

Reference (APA):
Allied Universal. (2025). World security report 2025–2026: Key trends shaping the future of security.

#SecurityTrends #ExecutiveProtection #RiskManagement #Compliance #BusinessSecurity #PhysicalSecurity #SecurityIndustry #LeadershipProtection #CorporateSecurity #2026Trends

Security Gaps

Spotting and Shutting Security Gaps in Healthcare

Spotting and Shutting Security Gaps in Healthcare Visitor Management

Frank Costa, President, Nexgen Protection Services

Hospitals and healthcare facilities are facing an increasingly complex risk landscape — from unauthorized access and patient privacy breaches to workplace violence and operational disruptions. In this environment, identifying security gaps before an incident occurs can make all the difference.

Visitor management is a critical frontline defense. Every person who enters a facility — whether a patient, family member, contractor, vendor, or volunteer — represents a potential point of vulnerability. Without proper procedures, bad actors or accidental breaches can compromise safety, privacy, and compliance.

ASIS International emphasizes that robust visitor management systems integrate credentialing, access control, monitoring, and audit trails to reduce risk and ensure accountability (ASIS International, 2020). Effective systems not only track who is in the facility but also help identify unusual patterns or behaviors that may indicate a security threat.

Practical strategies for healthcare security leaders include:

  • Implementing pre-registration and verification for all visitors
  • Using ID badges, wristbands, or digital credentials tied to access levels
  • Monitoring entrances and high-risk areas with video and patrols
  • Maintaining audit logs and regular reviews to detect anomalies
  • Training staff to recognize and escalate suspicious behavior

By proactively closing security gaps in visitor management, healthcare organizations protect patients, staff, and sensitive data, while maintaining a safe and welcoming environment. Security is not just about responding to incidents — it’s about anticipating risk and building trust through vigilance.

 

Reference (APA 7th ed.)
ASIS International. (2020). Healthcare security guidelines: Visitor management and access control. ASIS International.

#HealthcareSecurity #VisitorManagement #SecurityProtection #RiskManagement #PatientSafety #OperationalResilience #HospitalSecurity #AccessControl #SecurityLeadership #WorkplaceSafety

 

Team

Teamwork Is Your Greatest Security Protection

By Frank Costa, President, Nexgen Protection Services

In high-risk or hostile environments, technology and procedures matter — but nothing protects you more than knowing your team has your back. Physical barriers, surveillance systems, and access controls are critical, yet the human element — trust, coordination, and mutual support — is often the most effective layer of protection.

Security professionals, whether in corporate settings, critical infrastructure, or executive protection, thrive when teams operate with shared awareness, clear communication, and mutual accountability. Each member becomes a force multiplier, capable of identifying risks, responding quickly, and keeping others safe.

ASIS International emphasizes that effective security programs integrate people, process, and technology — and that human factors, including teamwork and situational awareness, are essential to protecting assets and personnel (ASIS International, 2021). Psychological safety, trust, and shared responsibility are not optional; they are operational imperatives.

Practical ways to strengthen your team’s protective capability include:

  • Conducting joint training and drills to build coordination under pressure
  • Maintaining open channels for reporting risks or anomalies
  • Encouraging mutual accountability and proactive assistance
  • Supporting one another physically and psychologically in challenging environments

Remember: security is as much about people as it is about systems. Looking out for each other is a force multiplier. In any high-risk scenario, the confidence that your team will act decisively and responsibly is the greatest protection you can have.

Reference (APA 7th ed.)
ASIS International. (2021). Security management professional standards. ASIS International.

#CorporateSecurity #SecurityProtection #Teamwork #SituationalAwareness #WorkplaceSafety #RiskManagement #OperationalResilience #ProtectAndServe #SecurityLeadership #MutualSupport

 

Security Protection

Who’s Really Inside Your Building? Rethinking Security Protection

By Frank Costa, President, Nexgen Protection Services

Take a moment and think about it. Not just the employees you see every day, but everyone who passes through your doors: cleaners, delivery drivers, contractors, IT support, facilities teams, visitors, temporary staff, and suppliers. How many of them were inside your building today — and how well do you really know them?

Physical security isn’t just about locking doors or staffing a front desk. It’s about understanding and managing access risk across all personnel. Every individual who enters your facility represents a potential vulnerability — from accidental safety oversights to deliberate threats.

ASIS International emphasizes that comprehensive security protection programs account for all building occupants, integrating access control, identity verification, and monitoring procedures to mitigate risk while maintaining operational flow (ASIS International, 2021). This includes temporary personnel, vendors, and service providers, whose presence is often overlooked in standard security planning.

Best practices include:

  • Vetting and credentialing all personnel with access to sensitive areas
  • Implementing time-bound or role-based access controls
  • Monitoring entry points and activity through surveillance and audit logs
  • Conducting regular reviews of visitor and contractor access policies

By thinking beyond employees, security leaders can reduce blind spots, strengthen operational resilience, and protect both people and assets. Security is not just a policy — it’s an awareness that every individual matters.

Reference (APA 7th ed.)
ASIS International. (2021). Physical security professional standards. ASIS International.

#CorporateSecurity #SecurityProtection #AccessControl #RiskManagement #PhysicalSecurity #SecurityAwareness #EnterpriseRisk #VisitorManagement #OperationalResilience #WorkplaceSafety

 

Privacy

Bug Sweeps: Protecting Privacy and Securing What Matters

By Frank Costa, President, Nexgen Protection Services

In a world where information is a high-value asset, bug sweeps have become an essential tool for safeguarding privacy, securing sensitive data, and providing peace of mind. Whether you’re an individual protecting your personal space or a business defending proprietary information, the risks of unauthorized surveillance are real and growing.

Bug sweeps detect hidden microphones, cameras, GPS trackers, and other covert devices that can compromise personal or corporate security. By proactively identifying vulnerabilities, individuals and organizations can prevent espionage, data breaches, and reputational damage before they occur.

According to ASIS International, systematic technical surveillance countermeasures (TSCM) — commonly known as bug sweeps — are a best practice in both corporate and executive protection programs (ASIS International, 2019). TSCM services combine specialized equipment, trained personnel, and methodical inspection processes to uncover threats that are otherwise invisible.

For businesses, bug sweeps protect intellectual property, trade secrets, client information, and sensitive strategic plans. For individuals, they provide assurance that private conversations, meetings, or personal activities remain confidential. Beyond protection, bug sweeps foster a culture of vigilance — demonstrating that privacy and security are priorities.

In an era of increasingly sophisticated surveillance, proactive detection is far better than reactive response. Investing in bug sweeps isn’t just about mitigating risk; it’s about preserving trust, integrity, and operational confidence.

Reference (APA 7th ed.)
ASIS International. (2019). Technical surveillance countermeasures (TSCM) standard. ASIS International.

#PrivacyProtection #BugSweeps #TechnicalSurveillanceCountermeasures #CorporateSecurity #ExecutiveProtection #DataSecurity #InformationSecurity #RiskManagement #SecurityAwareness #ProtectWhatMatters

 

Security Protection

Adaptability Is the Key to Modern Security Protection

By Frank Costa, President, Nexgen Protection Services

In today’s complex threat environment, the only constant is change. Risks evolve, vulnerabilities shift, and attackers constantly innovate. Effective corporate security protection depends on the ability to adapt quickly, absorb new information, and respond decisively.

Security professionals demonstrate this adaptability by navigating emerging threats, adopting new tools and technologies, and continuously refining operational approaches. Whether addressing physical security protection, cyber threats, insider risk, or hybrid attack vectors, success depends on staying one step ahead.

As highlighted by ASIS International, top-performing security teams continuously update procedures, integrate advanced technology, and leverage intelligence to anticipate and mitigate risk (ASIS International, 2021). Tools such as real-time monitoring, behavioral analytics, and incident management platforms enhance both situational awareness and response capabilities.

Adaptability also requires mindset: security leaders must challenge assumptions, learn from near misses, and incorporate lessons from past incidents. Teams that embrace this approach can pivot rapidly, safeguard assets, and protect employees and organizational reputation.

In essence, adaptability bridges intelligence and action. Organizations that cultivate adaptable security teams gain a strategic advantage — they don’t just react to incidents; they anticipate, prevent, and respond with precision.

References (APA 7th ed.)
ASIS International. (2021). Professional standards for security management. ASIS International.

#CorporateSecurity #SecurityLeadership #RiskManagement #OperationalResilience #ThreatDetection #ProtectiveServices #SecurityStrategy #Adaptability #EnterpriseSecurity #ProactiveProtection

 

Executive Protection Is Strategy — Not Just Presence

By Frank Costa, President, Nexgen Protection Services

Executive protection goes far beyond a visible security presence. It is about proactive planning, discretion, and risk prevention long before a threat materializes.

In today’s environment, corporate leaders face a spectrum of risks — physical threats, reputational targeting, cyber exposure, travel vulnerabilities, and insider risk. A bodyguard alone does not mitigate these complexities. A strategy does.

According to ASIS International, effective protection programs are grounded in risk assessment, advance planning, intelligence gathering, and continuous evaluation — not reactive deployment (ASIS International, 2021). The emphasis is on identifying vulnerabilities before they are exploited.

Research on protective intelligence further reinforces this principle. Frederick S. Calhoun and Stephen W. Weston highlights that targeted violence is often preceded by observable behaviors and leakage — meaning prevention depends on early detection and structured threat assessment (Calhoun & Weston, 2003).

What distinguishes a mature executive protection program?

  • Comprehensive risk assessments tied to business operations
  • Advance work and route planning for travel and events
  • Protective intelligence monitoring and behavioral threat assessment
  • Cyber hygiene integration with physical protection
  • Discretion that preserves executive productivity and brand reputation

The goal is not visibility. The goal is continuity.

Executive protection, done correctly, is quiet, intelligence-driven, and aligned with enterprise risk strategy. When it works, nothing happens — and that is success.

 

References (APA 7th ed.)
ASIS International. (2021). Executive protection standard. ASIS International.
Calhoun, F. S., & Weston, S. W. (2003). Contemporary threat management: A practical guide for identifying, assessing, and managing individuals of violent intent. Specialized Training Services.

 

#ExecutiveProtection #ProtectiveIntelligence #CorporateSecurity #RiskManagement #ThreatAssessment #SecurityLeadership #BusinessContinuity #EnterpriseRisk

 

Security Fundamentals

Back to Basics: Why Security Fundamentals Matter More Than Ever

By Frank Costa, President, Nexgen Protection Services

In today’s complex threat landscape, advanced tools and analytics are important — but the fundamentals of security protection matter more than ever.

  • Effective security operations are built on:
  • Ethical decision-making
  • Fact-based, unbiased investigations
  • Clear, defensible documentation
  • Alignment with enterprise risk and compliance objectives

When these basics are weak, even the most sophisticated technology cannot compensate. Investigations become inconsistent. Documentation fails under scrutiny. Risk decisions drift away from governance standards.

The foundation for disciplined security work is well established. ASIS International emphasizes structured investigative processes and documentation standards to ensure credibility, transparency, and defensibility (ASIS International, 2015). Likewise, the framework developed by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO) reinforces that internal controls, risk assessment, and governance alignment are essential to protecting organizational value (COSO, 2017).

Security leaders should equip their teams with a clear Investigations Standard — outlining principles, processes, reporting protocols, and oversight mechanisms. This ensures:

  • Consistency across cases
  • Protection of employee rights
  • Legal and regulatory defensibility
  • Alignment with enterprise risk strategy

Strong security fundamentals create operational integrity. Operational integrity builds executive trust.  And executive trust strengthens enterprise resilience.

In security protection, excellence is rarely about doing something extraordinary. It’s about doing the ordinary — exceptionally well.

References (APA 7th ed.)
ASIS International. (2015). Investigations standard. ASIS International.
Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission. (2017). Enterprise risk management—Integrating with strategy and performance. COSO.

#SecurityLeadership #Investigations #CorporateSecurity #RiskManagement #Governance #Compliance #OperationalExcellence #EnterpriseRisk