FEDERAL PROTECTIVE SERVICE Trademark
FEDERAL PROTECTIVE SERVICE is a USPTO trademark filed by U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Status: Registered.
Trademark Facts
| Mark | FEDERAL PROTECTIVE SERVICE |
|---|---|
| Serial Number | 88333815 |
| Registration Number | 6016598 |
| Status | Registered |
| Filing Date | 2019-03-11 |
| Registration Date | 2020-03-24 |
| Mark Type | Word |
| Nice Classes | 041 (Education & Entertainment), 045 (Legal Services) |
| Owner | U.S. Department of Homeland Security |
| Attorney of Record | Kelly Hyndman |
| Prosecution Events | 35 |
| Latest Event | E815 on 2026-03-11 |
Goods & Services
Providing training services, namely, training of all Federal employees and tenants and all new FPS law enforcement personnel, including training for Federal employees and tenants in active shooter response, crime prevention, and occupant emergency planning, initial entry training upon employment at the FPS Academy on issues such as hazardous materials response, canine handling, and weapons of mass destruction, post-academy training depending on assignment to special units, and career-continuous training and professional development to ensure all FPS law-enforcement personnel are properly and effectively trained to execute duties; Providing integrated security, law enforcement, and protective intelligence services for federal facilities in every state and territory of the United States namely, providing a visible law enforcement presence, overseeing contract security guards who conduct screenings and ID checks, performing background suitability checks for contract employees, conducting criminal investigations, including threats to federal employees, monitoring security alarms via centralized communications centers, sharing intelligence with federal, state, and local law enforcement partners, providing security during special events and critical incidents, and offering special operations, including K-9 explosive detection; providing guidance to Federal employees about actions to take to ensure the building where they work remains safe, namely, procedures on how to handle suspicious mail and bomb threats, how to evacuate, and who to contact; conducting security assessments of Federal facilities to identify risks; designing security countermeasures for Federal agencies to mitigate risks; "PROTECTIVE SERVICE"