
John and I at the SHOT Show in 2006
The world lost a great trainer yesterday. John Benner, founder of The Tactical Defense Institute, died after a long struggle with prostate cancer. TDI put out this notice:

One of John’s designs became Ka-Bar’s best selling blade
I first attended TDI as a student in 1998. A fellow officer and I were bored with our department’s firearms training and we wanted to get better. I saw an ad in the back of Combat Handguns magazine about TDI being in Ohio. My friend and I went to attend Level Two handgun. We skipped level one because we were cops and thought we knew how to shoot.
We were the two best shooters in the department. Both of us had won our respective academy shooting contests. Both of us learned more in that one day at TDI than we had in all of our previous police firearms training.
The following year, we went back for Level Three Handgun. By that time I was the agency’s full time firearms instructor. I had won my firearms instructor class “top shooter” award. I learned more at that one day at TDI than I had in several weeks of police firearms instructor certifications. John offered me a teaching job at that class for the upcoming 1999 shooting season. I accepted. The job changed my life.
I worked at TDI for 18 years. I initially started teaching basic classes and then eventually developed my own curriculum to teach there. At different points in time, I co-taught all the classes TDI held. Later I served as the lead instructor for TDI’s knife fighting, ground fighting, impact weapons, close quarters shooting, and civilian response to active killers courses. I continued to work at TDI until my own business began eating too much of my free time.

Mr. B. and TDI instructors after teaching West Point’s pistol team
In addition to giving me teaching experience, I also owe my first expert witness testimony to John Benner as well. Back about 20 years ago the state tax division reclassified TDI from a “police shooting range” to a “carnival” thereby tripling the workers’ comp fees Mr. Benner had to pay. They didn’t have a listing for “commercial shooting school” so they classified us as a “carnival” instead.
I had to testify how firearms training was fundamentally different than a carnival experience. For real.

John (on left) training under Rob Leatham’s guidance
I will be forever grateful for his friendship, guidance, and advice. I can only hope to follow his path with the same grace and courage.
Rest in Peace Mr. Benner. When you ponder on how your life tuned out, I hope that you feel able to award yourself a really high score. You deserve it. Countless cops, soldiers, and armed citizens are better able to protect themselves and their families thanks to your boundless passion for training and tactics.

This is an entire rolling trash can full of my police shooting trophies.
During my last year as a cop, I got so disgusted by the job that I didn’t want anything in my house that reminded me of police work.
I trashed the trophies.
I wouldn’t have won any of them without Mr. Benner’s instruction.
