Terence Anderson (sport shooter)
Anderson in 1976 | |
| Personal information | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1946 (age 79â80) |
| Sport | |
| Sport | Shooting |
Event | 25 meter rapid fire pistol |
| Club | U.S. Army |
Medal record | |
Terence "Terry" M. Anderson (born c. 1946)[2] is a retired Australian-born American sports shooter who specialized in the 25 meter rapid fire pistol event. He won the national championships in Australia in 1969 and 1971, in New Zealand in 1971â1973 and in the United States in 1975, 1977, 1979, 1993, 1997, 1999, 2000.[3] Internationally he won three gold medals and a silver medal at the 1972 Asian Championships. Won two gold medals setting the Hemisphere record at the 1977 Championships of the Americas. Pan Am Games silver medal at the 1979 Pan Am Games, two gold medals, the Pan Am and world record at the 1983 Pan Am Games[4] and four gold medals at the 1995 Pan American Games.[5] He was selected to the 1980 Olympic team, but missed the games due to their boycott by the United States[2] and selected to the 1996 Olympic Team in Atlanta.[citation needed]
Anderson was born in Sydney, Australia, where his grandfather, Ted Theodore served as the Australian federal treasurer and deputy prime minister.[6][2] He immigrated to the U.S. in April 1973 and became an American citizen in May 1974. He coached several Olympic teams, including the Brazilian, Canadian and Israel national teams in 1974â1978. Served as the U.S. Olympic Shooting Team 1980â1983.[1] While studying at the University of New Orleans he married a fellow student Marylynn. They later moved to Dallas.[2] He started pistol training at age 19 with his brother Tony, who was a member of the Australian Olympic team.[6]
During the last 20 years of his life Terry continued to build successful businesses, he constantly told his Team: âTwo things that WE must change and update 5 minutes after contact with the enemy are a: (1) Battle-Plan, and (2) Business-Plan!â. Â Paraphrasing Darwin: âIt is not the most intellectual of the species that survives; it is not the strongest that survives; but the species (and business) that survives is the one that is able to adapt to and to adjust best to the changing environment in which it finds itself.â
Australia to the U.S. 1973: After starting a successful construction company at age 19, in 1973 Terry moved this medium sized construction company from Sydney to the US in March 1973. The U.S. company was an immediate success and ultimately completed over 820 single family homes, condos and a number of office buildings. However, Terryâs business visa expired so Terry, after trying to apply for a âgreen cardâ, was told by the immigration officer âYou must do something no American can do before you get a green-cardâ. Competing at national level, Terry defeated both U.S. Olympians in Olympic-RF Pistol so the Army reserve National Guard helped him apply for his âgreen cardâ in July 1973. Terry received it in January 1974, joined the military and was fast-tracked to U.S. Citizenship in May 1974 so he could represent the U.S. internationally. Illegal alien to U.S. citizen in 11 months, a great start!
Olympic Shooting, maintaining a âPositive Mental Winning Attitudeâ: Terry joined the Army reserve component in January 1974 and in 1975 graduated from Fort Benning OCS as an officer. Terry was immediately assisgned as âMarksmanship Coordinatorâ to the Louisiana Army National Guard (LANG) and, between 1976 and 1980 he managed/coached the LANG shooting teams (pistol, rifle and machine gun) so that they dominated both the Army Area and the All Army military shooting competitions. After coaching Olympic teams in Brazil and Israel, in 1980 Terry was appointed U.S. Olympic Team pistol coach, then in 1983 Olympic shooting team âtraining-coordinatorâ (the shooting team coachâs coach) until his resignation late 1985. Terry hired his replacement as national pistol coach in March 1983 and returned as a competitor in 1983, winning two gold medals in the Pan-Am games and setting a world record.
Terry was selected to the U.S. International pistol teams for 27 years, retiring from shooting competition after winning the silver medal at the U.S. national championships in 2002; his âWorld Rankingâ was 17 at that time. During the period, 1975-2002, the U.S. military funded Terryâs shooting by placing him on military orders. He was selected as a competitor member, making the 1980 and 1996 Olympic teams, numerous Pan-Am Games teams, world championship teams, etc. winning 23 medals for the U.S. While on military orders, Terry competed in the Soviet Union, its eastern-bloc allies and in Cuba many times a year from the mid-70s up to the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991.
Israel May 1976-1983: Terry worked closely with the Israelis developing their Olympic shooting program and helped design their Olympic shooting training center in Herzliya. Israelâs Olympic Shooting association President from 1980 was General Itzhak Rabin (the hero of the 1967 Israel-Arab 6-day war and former Prime Minister), who called Terry âMy Architectâ. Terry worked with Israelâs Olympic shooting management until the mid-90s. Rabin asked Terry to work with Israel Military Industries to help âcommercializeâ some of their weaponâs systems. Rabin also helped Terry access leadership in both Poland and Hungary to negotiate and purchase âmilitary aircraftâ. Terry, at Rabinâs request, served in 1982 as a U.S. Army engineer captain on a short tour of âactive dutyâ attached as an âobserverâ to the Israeli Army in Lebanon
Russian Military Aircraft from 1983: Terry leveraged his Israeli contacts, to initially steal then buy Soviet military aircraft from a number of Soviet controlled eastern-bloc countries and Cuba. All of the Soviet-bloc countries shooting athletes were members of their respective militaries (same as the US in those days), these shooting athletes were called âsports-militaryâ. Between the mid-70s and 1991 Terry met various âministers of defenseâ as the Soviet âsports-militaryâ reported directly to the Ministers of Defense who was also a member of their respective politburo. Buying fighters, bombers, helicopters and transport aircraft from Soviet allies, especially Poland and Hungary, was not complicated as they were all desperate for $-money because their Soviet Style âcontrolled economiesâ did not work and, by the 80s they had trouble feeding their population. Terry initiated purchases of military aircraft, initially buying â2nd tier Russian fighters and bombersâ, with a great cover story of âbuying museum piecesâ. As Chairman and major shareholder of Aviation Classics, Reno, Nevada, he formed a âclassifiedâ defense company, obtained defense contracts through the Assistant Secretary Defense, Operational Test and Evaluation, then formed two companies, one with a âsecretâ (C3P) the other with a âT/Secretâ clearance, to negotiate both âsecretâ and âT/Sâ contracts with various government agencies worth over $340-million.
After putting a âfoundationâ together to save St Monicaâs church school, Dallas, in the mid-80s, Terry focused his âgiving programsâ on education. In the 21st century the âFamily Trustâ he formed has continued to focus a large percentage of its revenue on education and on the two schools it built.
In the early 90s Terry formed a âbusiness incubatorâ, assembling a team of business and military friends to meet regularly to âplan for the futureâ. That team helped Terry develop PRN (Physicians Referral Network), sold in 1999 for $42-million and then, Data Recovery Services, a company Terry built to become the second largest Data Recovery/Data Forensics company in the U.S. between 1997 and 2004 â a company that is still very profitable in 2022.
1986 Terry formed the SW Chapter of the U.S. Olympians and served as its President until 1990. This chapter was the 2nd U.S. Olympians chapter after Southern California.
Military from 1985: Assigned to the Corps of Engineers General Staff (USACE), as an Engineer Captain in 1985, Terry was promoted to Major and was assigned (at his request) to USACE Emergency Operations center (EOC) where he managed USACE âdisaster response operations centerâ during natural disasters and war from 1986 to 1997. Terry was âactivatedâ (as needed) to run the USACE-EOC during numerous U.S. âdisastersâ, including engineer projects that included infrastructure recovery after the San Francisco earthquake, Northridge earthquake, a slew of annual hurricanes, regional floods, the rebuild of Kuwait City in 1992, etc. Terry served 1-year as a deputy Division commander (IMA).
Army General Staff 1998: Terry was invited to the Pentagon and interviewed by the Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army. At the end of the short meeting, Terry was ordered to the U.S. Army General Staff for a 2-year assignment and granted the highest security clearance available in the U.S. Army, serving as âassistant chief congressional-liaisonâ working with the White House executive branch and congress.
2000 congressional elections: Terry was finance Chair for a Texas congressional campaign with the (successful!) focus on protecting 2 other powerful Texas congressional seats.
The U.S. Army General Staff 2001: Terry was so effective that his 2-year assignment was extended 3 times (a total of 5 years) due to Terryâs extensive experience in âdisaster response operationsâ and âhomeland securityâ. After 9/11, 2001 Terry was heavily involved in the âglobal war on Terrorâ, a logical choice since Terry managed U.S. disaster response operations for USACE for more than 11 years and had developed extensive personal international contacts. Immediately after 9/11, The global war on terror was approved and funded by Congress and Terry was involved in implementing âOperation Enduring Freedomâ. Terry was involved in planning the invasion of Afghanistan and then, in 2002, the (stupid!) invasion of Iraq.
26 Years of marriage was long enough: Terryâs wife ran up serious credit card debt (Terry was not informed), so in early 2003 she filed a divorce-money grab. Another reason for the divorce finishing the 26-year marriage was her new âreligious fervorâ. She filed for divorce, called the Feds and signed a âvoluntary firearms surrenderâ document (did not include Terryâs name on the document); they confiscated Terryâs collection of museum grade firearms valued at over $100-thousand, a museum ready collection given to Terry when he the surrendered the defense companyâs corporate firearms licenses in 1991. Terry mistakenly did not pay the $3,200 tax to transfer and re-license the collection in his name!
Convicted in February-2004 under the âtax codeâ for not paying $3,200 âtransfer Taxâ by an âanti-military, anti-gunâ judge. Further, this judge ignored government requests for a 12-month probation conviction so Terry could serve in Iraq as a senior Engineer Officer in 2004. In early May 2004, Terry âself-reportedâ to âClub-Fedâ, a federal âCampâ with no locked doors and only a 2 ft perimeter fence. After spending over $1-million in legal fees, Terryâs ex-wife did not gain control over Terryâs companies as the divorce Judge, after reviewing her actions, granted â50-50 Joint Ownershipâ on their family estate, thus forcing their âfire saleâ. The government was aghast that Terry was convicted of the crime of not paying $3,200 transfer tax on legally acquired weapons, his military superiors stated that this conviction was a âtravesty of Justice on this fine officerâ.
2004-06 Education: Terry put together a team and worked with them to prepare and implement a teaching program based upon âdeveloping and implementing an effective business planâ; the eight classes were known as âmain street to wall streetâ. These classes graduated over 750 individuals, each with their own personal âBusiness Planâ, a graduation requirement. The program continued and is now taught in prison systems in a number of states. Why? It focuses on teaching drug dealers and âcriminal entrepreneursâ how to build legal businesses and stay out of prison.
2006-Planning âThe Futureâ: Terry looked to âthe future of Technologyâ and assembled an advisory team to âpredict and plan for the futureâ. Over the years they were correct more often than not. For example, in 2014 they predicted that the âInternet revolutionâ of the 1990s would become the âBlockchain revolutionâ of the 2020s. Driven by technology, they see that the U.S. will witness many more changes between 2022 and 2027 than we did between 1960 and 2000. And, with AI, what changes can we expect by 2035 and then by 2040?
2007 â Chamber of Commerce: âIf we are not changing, we are stagnatingâ. Asked by Governor Perry in early 2007 to implement the Texas Israel Chamber of Commerce, Terry formed the Chamber, hired a President/CEO, appointed 56 board members and resigned; however, at the 1st board meeting in June 2007, Terry was surprised when the board unanimously elected Terry as founding Chairman. Terry served the Chamber as Chairman and then on various executive committees until his resignation in 2013. The Chamber honored Terry as âChairman Emeritusâ. Late 2007 Terry met with Israelâs President and Prime Minister as well as numerous military and political leaders. They thanked him for establishing the Chamber office in Tel-Aviv as well as his work mitigating the âterror threatâ (while he served on the U.S. Army General Staff). During this period Terry negotiated the relocation of 31 Tech companies from Israel to the U.S., most were teamed-up with and/or acquired by Texas companies.
Terryâs âFamily Trustâ 2006: The âTrustâ was well funded by 2006 when Terry realized that he did not have a family to maintain, did not have a demanding job on the U.S. Army General Staff and was no longer competing on the world stage in Olympic and military shooting (after winning 17 national titles and 23 international medals). Terry focused on building real wealth for the âTrustâ, ultimately managing the sale of one of the companies for over $94-million after tax. After 2014 Terry focused on Blockchain IP and patents, assets of the âFamily Trustâ; patents and IP valued in June 2022 were reflected on the âTrustâ balance sheet, which had risen to over $152-million.
Still winning: Over the years Terry built a collection of 12 collector Bentleys, Bentleys that over the years won 3 prestigious national concours events.
References
[edit]- ^ a b File:Terence Anderson 1976.jpg
- ^ a b c d Ray Sasser (June 14, 1987) Longshot Guns For Medal. Dallas Morning News
- ^ U.S. shooting team picked at Phoenix. wwmcmillan.info
- ^ Shooting Pan-American Games Caracas (VEN) 1983. todor66.com
- ^ Steven Olderr (2009). The Pan American Games / Los Juegos Panamericanos: A Statistical History, 1951â1999, bilingual edition / Una Historia EstadĂstica, 1951â1999, ediciĂłn bilingĂźe. McFarland. pp. 215â. ISBN 978-1-4766-0468-8.
- ^ a b Aparisi, Javier (11 July 2013). "Terry Anderson: Bentleys, Pistols, and Top-Secret Clearance". Miami New Times. Retrieved 26 May 2014.
- 1946 births
- Living people
- American male sport shooters
- Australian male sport shooters
- Australian emigrants to the United States
- Australian people of Romanian descent
- ISSF pistol shooters
- Shooters at the 1983 Pan American Games
- Shooters at the 1995 Pan American Games
- Medalists at the 1983 Pan American Games
- Medalists at the 1995 Pan American Games
- Pan American Games gold medalists for the United States in shooting
- University of New Orleans alumni
- Sport shooters from Sydney
- Sportsmen from New South Wales
- 20th-century American sportsmen
- 20th-century Australian sportsmen