John Fulbright
Instructor # 356199 | Shooters University
Certified with the USCCA since 11/10/2013
Certification Renewal Date 10/6/2025
USCCA Certifications
- Concealed Carry & Home Defense
- Women's Handgun & Self-Defense
- Countering the Mass Shooter
- Emergency & First Aid
- Concealed Carry & Home Defense Fundamentals - Training Counselor
- Defensive Shooting
My Biography
John Fulbright is the owner of Shooters University, LLC, a firearms training company teaching students at all skill levels, how to use their handguns more efficiently for defense and counter ambush situations. John started 777 Logistics Group, LLC, and Shooters University, LLC, after his deployments to Iraq and friends asked him for advice on what handgun to purchases and basic shooting skills.
John started getting involved in training while he was serving in the Marine Corps and continued in the Army. John did two deployments in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. John is now the lead firearms instructor for his police department and lead instructor for his company. John is certified in Less Lethal Instructor for ALS Technologies, Certified USCCA Instructor, USCCA Training Counselor, NRA Training Counselor, Shotgun Breaching Instructor, Instructor 1 through the National Fire Academy, and Intuitive Defensive Shooting Instructor through I.C.E. Training to name a few.
Shooters University courses are conducted in a relaxed, friendly atmosphere. While safety is emphasized, every effort is made to ensure the courses are enjoyable for all. With a maximum of 10 students per instructor basic/intermediate class and 6 students per instructor for advanced class, you will receive personal attention from the instructors. This is difficult if not impossible at other firearm training facilities, where you will have to shoot alongside 20 or 30 other students, and the student to instructor ratio is too high to allow significant personal attention from the instructors. Many courses are instructed with a student to instructor ratio of 20 to 1 or more. Ask yourself the question, “Could I improve my skills in a class where I share the instructor’s attention with nineteen other students as efficiently as I could in a class where I share the instructor’s attention with four other students?”