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Resecurity Showcased AI-powered Cyber Threat Intelligence (CTI) Solutions at Milipol Paris 2025

Business

Resecurity Showcased AI-powered Cyber Threat Intelligence (CTI) Solutions at Milipol Paris 2025
Business

Business

Resecurity Showcased AI-powered Cyber Threat Intelligence (CTI) Solutions at Milipol Paris 2025

2025-12-02 00:50 Last Updated At:12-08 16:30

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Dec 1, 2025--

Resecurity, a global cybersecurity and threat-intelligence company trusted by Fortune 100 enterprises and government agencies, exhibited at Milipol Paris 2025, the world’s leading event for homeland security and safety. The exhibition took place at Paris-Nord Villepinte Exhibition Centre, gathering decision-makers, law-enforcement agencies, defense entities and security innovators from more than 150 countries.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20251201902761/en/

Milipol Paris is internationally recognized as the flagship event for public security, homeland defense, intelligence, counterterrorism, and critical infrastructure protection. The 2025 edition will highlight advanced technologies driving the global security landscape, including digital forensics, cyber intelligence, identity protection, ISR capabilities, and national resilience solutions.

At the exhibition, Resecurity presented its latest AI-powered, intelligence-driven platforms that support government, defense, and law enforcement missions:

Resecurity’s solutions are designed to provide comprehensive visibility into the threat environment, improve situational awareness, and support operational decision-making for agencies across defense, intelligence, and public safety domains.

Resecurity’s presence at Milipol Paris 2025 highlighted the technological excellence of the company's portfolio and included live demonstrations, strategic partner briefings, and sessions on cyber defense and next-generation intelligence programs.

About Resecurity

Resecurity® is a cybersecurity company that delivers a unified endpoint protection, fraud prevention, risk management and cyber-threat intelligence platform. Known for providing best-of-breed, data-driven intelligence solutions, Resecurity’s services and platforms focus on early-warning identification of data breaches and comprehensive protection against cybersecurity risks. Founded in 2016, it has been globally recognized as one of the world’s most innovative cybersecurity companies with the mission of enabling organizations to combat cyber threats regardless of their sophistication. Most recently, by Inc. Magazine, Resecurity was named one of the Top 10 fastest-growing private cybersecurity companies in Los Angeles, California. Resecurity is a member of InfraGard National Members Alliance (INMA), AFCEA, NDIA, SIA, FS-ISAC and several American Chambers of Commerce worldwide. To learn more, visit https://resecurity.com.

About Milipol Paris 2025

Milipol Paris is the leading worldwide event dedicated to homeland security and safety, supported by the French Ministry of the Interior and organized under the auspices of the Milipol Network. Held at Paris-Nord Villepinte, the event gathers government delegations, law-enforcement professionals, security manufacturers and technology innovators to explore solutions across cyber security, anti-terrorism, border control, digital identity, public-safety technology and critical-infrastructure protection. To learn more, visit https://www.milipol.com/en.

Resecurity Showcased AI-powered Cyber Threat Intelligence (CTI) Solutions at Milipol Paris 2025

Resecurity Showcased AI-powered Cyber Threat Intelligence (CTI) Solutions at Milipol Paris 2025

DENVER (AP) — The parents of a 16-year-old boy who wounded two students at a Colorado high school with an old revolver his family said was kept in a locked gun safe won't be charged with any crimes, authorities said Wednesday.

Investigators looked at whether the parents of Desmond Holly, who killed himself after opening fire, could possibly be charged with allowing access to the Smith & Wesson .38 special revolver or for not storing it safely, but decided there wasn't enough evidence for that, the Jefferson County Sheriff's Office said.

Holly shot himself after opening fire at Evergreen High School on Sept. 10 and later died.

Investigators didn't find the parents' DNA on the gun after getting a court order to collect DNA samples from them, the sheriff's office said. It said the family's lawyer recently told investigators that the gun, described as a family heirloom that had been owned by a grandparent, was kept stored near the back of a large, locked gun safe, the office said. Holly didn't have access to the safe except for brief times when it was opened by his father, according to the lawyer.

The family's lawyer, Douglas Richards, told The Associated Press the family believes Holly must have secretly taken the gun, which was never used, from the safe while he was cleaning other firearms with his father.

“Its disappearance didn't become apparent until after the tragedy,” Richards said.

The sheriff's office said investigators weren't able to speak with the parents. Richards said the parents spoke with authorities right after the shooting and later answered questions in writing because he didn't want them interviewed further unless there was a prosecutor present.

Investigators believe Holly randomly shot at students at the high school in the foothills about 30 miles (50 kilometers) west of Denver, sheriff's office spokesperson Jacki Kelley said Wednesday.

At the time, the sheriff's office said that Holly had been radicalized by an unspecified “extremist network."

Kelley said the investigation showed that Holly had an obsession with other school shooters and had engaged with a mix of online groups but was not committed to any particular kind of radicalization. She referred further questions about those findings to the FBI, which handled that portion of the probe. The agency said a reporter would have to file a records request to obtain more information.

A report by the Anti-Defamation League’s Center on Extremism found that Holly had been active on an online forum where users watch videos of killings and violence, mixed in with content on white supremacism and antisemitism. It found Holly was also fascinated with previous mass shootings including the 1999 Columbine High School massacre that killed 14 people, about 20 miles (32 kilometers) away from Evergreen.

FILE - Flowers are left in remembrance of those wounded in a shooting at Evergreen High School in Evergreen, Colo., Thursday, Sept. 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Colleen Slevin, File)

FILE - Flowers are left in remembrance of those wounded in a shooting at Evergreen High School in Evergreen, Colo., Thursday, Sept. 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Colleen Slevin, File)

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