Five from keesler win AETC information dominance awards Published Dec. 13, 2012 By Senior Airman Heather Heiney 81st Training Wing Public Affiars KEESLER AIR FORCE BASE, Miss. -- Five Keesler Airmen won Air Education and Training Command-level awards in the annual Gen. John P. Jumper Awards for Excellence in Warfighing Integration and the Information Dominance Annual Awards. Winners are: Tech. Sgt. Frank Meagher, 333rd Training Squadron - Outstanding Cyber Surety NCO. Tech. Sgt. Brian Owens, 333rd TRS - Outstanding Spectrum Operations NCO. Tech. Sgt. Aaron Lujan, 81st Training Support Squadron - Outstanding Cyberspace Systems NCO. Senior Master Sgt. Jason Holbert, 81st TRSS - Outstanding Cyberspace Systems Senior NCO. Tech. Sgt. Guillermo Muniz, 333rd TRS - Outstanding Cyber Defense Operations NCO. Meagher conducted 360 hours of computer security validation and aligned training curriculum with the National Security Agency version. He secured 400, 81st Training Wing information items with a $1 million value and sustained encryption requirements for 32 training classes per year. He also "adopted" a mother and two children at a shelter for nonviolence and raised $2,000 to help their family. Owens taught 324 hours, supplied radio frequency and signal-finding techniques to 76 students with a 96 percent class average. He completed a 100-hour combat skills training course which improved his combat survival expertise. Also, as a Dragon Walk volunteer he mentored and ensured accountability of more than 7,000 students. Lujan helped certify 160 Airmen by writing a radar training package which ensured deployment rotation continuity. He prepared 228 squadron members for five base exercises and two real-world events in his squadron's unit control center. He also trained 10 curriculum developers and led the publication of 40 training packages. Holbert established cyber operations rules of engagement during a deployment in support of the International Security Assistance Force. He led 24 chief master sergeants during a Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff event. He also was the cyber team lead for the AETC consolidated unit inspection in October and was recognized as a professional performer by the inspector general team. Muniz mapped a training plan for the entire cyber warfighter Air Force Specialty Code. He taught more than 1,200 hours contributing to the education of 378 new cyber defense operators yearly. He also lead 120 wing top three members in a 48-hour event decorating a retiree home.