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What We Do

Empower AI uses innovative technologies and their specialized platform to support federal missions and empower agency personnel to solve unique government challenges​.

ADDITIONAL FEATURES

Robert Shook - Army Counterintelligence and Technical Security Specialist

From Army counterintelligence to technical security specialist, Robert Shook has made service his...

Katrina Whitenack - Army Combat Medic and Medical Reviewer

After 5 years in the Army, Katrina Whitenack turned her experience as a Combat Medic into a succe...

Judith Buford - Naval Reservist and Medical Reviewer

Judith Buford uses her experience in organization and time management from her time as a Naval Re...

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Robert Shook - Army Counterintelligence and Technical Security Specialist

What inspired you to join the military?

I was raised in a patriotic family by God-fearing parents who encouraged us to live a life of service. Our family was large, and my father, a career firefighter, brought in enough money for our daily needs but not enough to put us through college. I worked full-time while attending college, and after five years of schooling with credits for three academic years, some Vietnam vets at my summer job convinced me to consider the military. The recruiters discussed options based on my testing, and in July of 1979, I joined the Army, attended basic in SC, and then went to the Intelligence School at Ft Huachuca, AZ.


What was your role during your time of service?

I was an Army Counterintelligence Special Agent my whole career (25 years) with specialized training in security technologies. CI Agents were trained and appointed to conduct CI investigations and operations supporting the Army, the DoD, and, in my case, NATO and other allies. The authority and jurisdiction for Army CI Special Agents includes investigating national security crimes using special investigative procedures, conducting counterintelligence operations, conducting both surveillance and counter-surveillance activities, and supporting counter-terrorism operations as authorized by Executive Order 12333 and applicable regulations.


What are some key achievements from your time in the service?

I was selected for and attended Technical Surveillance Countermeasures (TSCM) training before my third year in the Army was finished, which set the path of my career. In 1995, I was assigned to the Land Information Warfare Activity (LIWA) at Ft Belvoir. LIWA was a newly created unit with a mission to develop intelligence support to the emerging information warfare and cyber threats across the DoD; LIWA is now the 1st Information Operations Command (Land), with an ever-expanding cyber and information operations mission.


My next assignment sent me back to Belgium for my third tour supporting the Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (SHAPE). In August 2001, I was deployed to Skopje, Macedonia, to conduct CI liaison with the Macedonian military and the UN mission in support of the reconstruction of Kosovo. While in Skopje, the 9/11 attacks occurred, and our liaison efforts produced valuable counter-terrorism support to the NATO forces and the US embassy. My final assignment was as the Army TSCM PM, providing oversight and managerial support to all Army TSCM assets worldwide.


Why is it important that we celebrate Veterans Day as a nation?

In the US, Veterans Day is a time to remember and honor the service and sacrifices veterans have made throughout history to protect the United States, particularly in times of war. To quote President Ronald Reagan (1983), “Veterans know better than anyone else the price of freedom, for they’ve suffered the scars of war. We can offer them no better tribute than to protect what they have won for us.”


How do you recognize Veterans Day and Military Family Appreciation Month?

My wife, also a veteran, and I will often meet with friends from our many assignments to share time and comradery with them. This year, however, we are focused on my wife’s family, who have served in an active duty position or as a federal employee in the DoD.


What is your role at Empower AI?

Our team supports the US Capitol Police Special Security Bureau. Specifically, I am on the team providing technical security, technical countermeasures, and counterintelligence expertise to the mission of the USCP.


How do you use the skills you learned in the military today?

The foundation of all my security, technologies, and investigations expertise is based on my Army career.

Ted Jennings - U.S. Army Veteran and Program Manager

  • Aug 29, 2023
  • 3 min read

During a 30-year career in the U.S. Army, Empower AI's Ted Jennings has just about done it all. ROTC at Auburn University. Second Lieutenant to Colonel. The Iron Mike Award at the Army’s Airborne School. Certified M-1 Armored Tank Commander. Platoon Leader. Company Commander. DoD’s Biometrics Program Manager.


He was even the project manager for a 400-foot Army catamaran that could sail at 50 knots with an entire battalion with its motorized equipment on board. And no doubt there’s a story or two about becoming a landmine and munitions expert while at Picatinny Arsenal in New Jersey.


The list goes on…

But regardless of where he was stationed or who he was leading, his command philosophy has always remained the same – including as a senior director and program manager on several contracts at Empower AI.


“No matter what, people are always the most important asset,” said Jennings, who retired as a Colonel in 2013 soon after he completed a one-year deployment in Afghanistan. He joined Empower AI a year later. “As a platoon leader, I could have 30 people, or as a PM, I could be managing 600. Whatever it is, if those people need something and I can help them do it, I feel a responsibility to help.”


Jennings said that’s what he enjoys - helping people be successful at what they do.

“That’s what has always attracted me to Empower AI,” he said. “That’s how they’ve always treated me, which encourages me to treat others the same.”


Jennings noted that he’s been trying to help others be successful his whole life, starting from his days growing up in a small town in southern Illinois, where he enjoyed sports and scouting (he was one of the first Eagle Scouts ever in his community). Those activities led him to an ROTC scholarship at Auburn University where he met his wife, Dianne. After graduation, he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the National Guard for a year, before he came on active duty in the Army at Fort Belvoir, Va. He graduated in the top 10 percent of his class, which meant he had his choice between going to Airborne School or becoming an Army Ranger.


“I chose Airborne School, because I liked my current body weight,” he joked. “Ranger School, that’s tough stuff.”


Veteran Leadership Today

Today, Jennings uses all that experience to lead several programs for Empower AI, ranging from the U.S. Capitol Police and the Department of Justice, to supporting one of the company’s largest programs at the Department of Defense that focuses on artificial intelligence. These days, he manages most of the projects from his home office in Florida, where he moved in 2019 to help take care of his and his wife’s aging parents. He’s grateful that Empower AI has always had trust in him and his teams to perform at their best, no matter where they’re located.


“Empower AI was doing telecommuting before COVID-19 hit, before it was the only way to do business,” Jennings said. “When we made the decision to move to Florida to support our family, Empower AI’s senior leaders said, ‘Absolutely, go ahead. We’ll figure it out.’ So, we made it work because the senior leaders were willing to support that kind of thing. I am proud to have Empower AI’s branding on my wall. I want to make sure everyone sees that. That’s where my loyalty is.”


As for celebrating Veterans Day, Jennings noted the significant change in the way people recognize veterans today, versus when he first joined ROTC in 1978. He said as cadets, they weren’t allowed to wear their uniforms off campus due to safety concerns related to how service members and veterans were treated after the Vietnam War.


“It’s changed a lot in my lifetime, compared to now,” he said. “When I was in uniform and going through airports or wherever, people would come up to me and say, ‘thank you for your service.’ Or today, they do that if I’m wearing my Army hat.


“The first time they did that, was Afghanistan,” Jennings continued. “I didn’t know how to deal with that at first, but I’ve become more comfortable with it. And now I say, thank you for saying that, or you’re welcome. But the mindset has changed, and most people look at service members as people doing service to help people, help the country, serving the country. So, I’m glad we have Veterans Day, and we can recognize veterans. It means a lot to me to have a day set aside for veterans, and I’m proud to be one.”

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