Memorials
to Fallen K-9s
2008-B
The
F.A.S.T. Co. donates sets of memorial cards to all partners
I
need your help to inform me of such
losses.
Dept. addresses available
for those who want to send condolences to officers. See below
|
In Loving
Memory of
K-9 BLEK
November 20,
2007
-- -----
Handler:
Eric Bailey
Granite City Police Department
Chief
of Police Richard E Miller
2330 Madison
Avenue
Granite City,
Illinois 62040-4775
Non-emergency:
(618)451-9760
Born: June 3,
1998
April 2000 -
Started street patrol with handler, Eric Bailey,for Cahokia, IL PD.
August 2005 -
Retired from Cahokia PD, the K9 department was eliminated.
June 2006 - Blek
returned to street patrol with handler who began work with Granite City
PD.
2007 - attended
the USPCA National PD, 1 certification in FL
(scored high
enough to earn a National Certification despite showing early signs of
illness)
Nov.20, 2007 -
K9 Blek had to be euthanized due to complications of cancer found in his
liver.
Accomplishments - Awards
Several top
10 finishes in the Region 16 USPCA PD 1 Trials including a 4th place
overall finished
in 2007
Several USPCA
Patrol Catch of the quarter awards:
(2)
"Outstanding K9 Service Awards" in 2004 from teh German Shepherd Dog
Club of St. Louis
for Tracking
and Suspect Apprehension.
(1) 1st
place awared in 2004 from the German Shepherd Dog Club of St. Louis for
Handler Protection.
Numerours drug / weapon finds:
(21) Street
Apprehensions of suspects.
Numerous
other apprehensions without a bite (suspect gives up after K9 presence
or announcement).
2007 USPCA
Region 16 Patrol Catch of the Year for a track and apprehension of a
suspect
which cleared
(4) vehicle burglaries.
Blek was the
most loyal and loving companion I've ever had. Everyone who met Blek,
loved him (except the criminals, that is!) He touched the lives of many
people and that is apparent by the emails, cards, letters, phone calls,
and flowers we received. He was my partner, and a member of my family.
He was my best friend for 8 years. "Blek" we miss you every single day,
but I will try to focus on the happiness you brought to my life and my
family. Rest in peace my friend. I will look forward to meeting up
with ou again someday.
submitted by Eric
|
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BRISCO
November
9, 2007-
Handler:
Deputy Kevin Johnson
Oklahoma
County Sheriff Dept.
address?
ph:
405 713.1000
K-9
Deputy killed during Stop
An
Oklahoma County Sheriff's Department K9 was killed early today while pursuring
a man who ran from
officers
after a stop at Interstate 35 & I-44. K-9 Brisco, a 6 year old Dutch
German shepherd, died when
he
was struck by a pick-up as he was chasing the man, department spokesman,
Mark Myers said.
It
is just a tragic event, particularily for his handler, the driver (of pickup)
didn't see him until it was
too
late. It happened about 4:30 a.m. when deputies pulled over a sport
utility vehicle. There
were
three people in the SUV and one was acting suspicious. When deputies got
the three out of the SUV,
one
took off eastbound over I-35. Brisco's handler, Deputy Kevin Johnson,
saw there was no traffic at the
time
and released his K-9 dupty partner. He ran after the suspect and
when he crossed the northbound
lanes,
he was hit by the pickup. The man who fled was captured. He
was identified by sheriff's
deputies
as Wilkin Herrera, 27, of Pennsylvania. Myers said Herrera was wanted
on several felony
drug
warrants in his home state. Myers said a small amount of marijuana
was found in the SUV.
In
addition to the warrants, Herrera was arrested on complaints of obstructing
justice,
possession
of marijuana, escape, resisting arrenst and killing a police K9.
The driver of the
SUV,
Robyn Roberets, 21, was arrested on complaints of obstructing justice,
possession of
marijuana,
haroring a fugitive and driving under suspension. The other passenger,
Rico M. Wilkins,
29,
was arrested on complaints of obstructing justice, harboring a fugitive
and possession of
marijuana.
Myers said Johnson and Brisco had been together "24 hours a day" for 3
years, ever
since
the dog, secured through a $9,500 grant from Milkbone, joined the department.
The
pickup
driver was not injured and will not be charged with an offense. There
wasn't anything he could do.
This
is really tough on Kevin, but it is hard on all of us. submitted
by Jim Cortina
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BULLET
October
26, 2007
Handler: Sgt. Bruce
Franks
Prophetstown
Police Department
339
Washington Street
Prophetstown,
IL 61277 - (815) 537-5598
Prophetstown
town's beloved nose-y police dog put to rest
Bullet
might have seemed a odd pick for a police dog. As a chocolate Labrador
who was true to his kind, he carried an enthusiasm for all things that
only can be described as borderline deranged joy. Friend and foe would
be greeted the same, tail whipping and wagging with disregard. He never
was meant to be one of those police dogs that chased down foes, growling
and snapping them into submission, and he wasn’t. The Prophetstown Police
Department wanted Bullet for his nose. The dog was trained to sniff out
cocaine, methamphetamine, cannabis and LSD and to track fleeing suspects
or missing persons. For five years, that's what the dog did. Last Friday,
Sgt. Bruce Franks, his handler, made the difficult decision to put his
partner to rest. The dog was sick and suffering from tumors. "It was the
right thing to do, but that doesn't mean it was the easy thing to do,"
Sgt. Franks said. "I hoped he would make it through the year because of
the
kids and all, but I could tell that just wasn't going to be in the cards."
Bullet came on duty May 13, 1996. The police department raised $7,687 from
the community to buy the dog and pay for Sgt. Franks' training and certification
as a handler. One night after a council meeting, Sgt. Franks silenced a
few disbelievers by having Bullet find a quarter hidden by the aldermen
in the council chambers and then upped the ante by flipping a coin into
a nearby field. Bullet, as Sgt. Franks can tell you, had something of a
nose.
"When
we would get to work, you could hear his nose just popping," Sgt. Franks
said. "He was a good dog." The community's sixth-grade DARE class named
him Bullet. He was an immediate hit with the kids in classrooms, maybe
a little less popular on the streets around town. "We got a few arrests,"
Sgt. Franks said. "There's a few people around town who probably didn't
like to see him coming." Ald. Bill Uhler once called him his favorite city
employee. "Doesn't whine or complain, and he gets paid in dog food," Sgt.
Franks recalled Ald. Uhler saying. One night, Sgt. Franks was called out
to the interstate, where a state trooper had pulled over a suspect. "We
got to the scene and (the trooper) said the guy was acting hinky," Sgt.
Franks said. "He searched the car but couldn't find anything. I got Bullet
into the back seat and bang, he hit on the rear seat. “I pulled him out
of there, and the trooper stuck his hands into where the two parts of the
seat meet up and he came out with nothing. He asked me, 'You sure about
this?' I got Bullet back in and bang, he hit right there on the seat again.
“The trooper was kind of looking at me and I crawled into the back seat
and stuffed my hands in as far as I could go and pulled out a big bundle
of bills. That trooper couldn't believe it. The (suspect's) eyes got big
and he started saying, 'That's not mine, that's not mine.'" Bullet retired
in May 2001, after five years of service. The dog suffered occasional seizures
that were costly to treat. The department decided not to replace him. He
was sent to live out his life with Sgt. Franks and his family, and that's
what he did. submitted by Jim Cortina, CPWDA
*******
and more about BULLET
P-town's
beloved nose-y police dog put to rest
By
Todd Welvaert, twelvaert@qconline.com. -
Chicago
Tube & Iron
Bullet
might have seemed a odd pick for a police dog.
As
a chocolate Labrador who was true to his kind, he carried an enthusiasm
for all things that only can be described as borderline deranged joy. Friend
and foe would be greeted the same, tail whipping and wagging with disregard.
He never was meant to be one of those police dogs that chased down foes,
growling and snapping them into submission, and he wasn’t. The Prophetstown
Police Department wanted Bullet for his nose. The dog was trained to sniff
out cocaine, methamphetamine, cannabis and LSD and to track fleeing suspects
or missing
persons.
For five years, that's what the dog did. Last Friday, Sgt. Bruce
Franks, his handler, made the difficult decision to put his partner to
rest. The dog was sick and suffering from tumors. "It was the right
thing to do, but that doesn't mean it was the easy thing to do," Sgt. Franks
said. "I hoped he would make it through the year because of the kids and
all, but I could tell that just wasn't going to be in the cards."
Bullet came on duty May 13, 1996. The police department raised $7,687 from
the community to buy the dog and pay for Sgt. Franks' training and certification
as a handler. One night after a council meeting, Sgt. Franks silenced
a few disbelievers by having Bullet find a quarter hidden by thealdermen
in the council chambers and then upped the ante by flipping a coin into
a nearby field. Bullet, as Sgt. Franks can tell you, had something of a
nose. "When we would get to work, you could hear his nose just popping,"
Sgt. Franks said. "He was a good dog." The community's sixth-grade
DARE class named him Bullet. He was an immediate hit with the kids in classrooms,
maybe a little less popular on the streets around town. We got a few arrests,"
Sgt. Franks said. "There's a few people around town who probably didn't
like to see him coming." Ald. Bill Uhler once called him his favorite
city employee. "Doesn't whine or complain, and he gets paid in dog food,"
Sgt.Franks recalled Ald. Uhler saying. One night, Sgt. Franks was
called out to the interstate,
where
a state trooper had pulled over a suspect. "We got to the scene and
(the trooper) said the guy was acting hinky," Sgt. Franks said. "He searched
the car but couldn't find anything. I got Bullet into the back seat and
bang, he hit on the rear seat. “I pulled him out of there, and the
trooper stuck his hands into where the two parts of the seat meet up and
he came out with nothing. He asked me, 'You sure about this?' I got Bullet
back in and bang, he hit right there on the seat again. “The trooper
was kind of looking at me and I crawled into the back seat and stuffed
my hands in as far as I could go and pulled out a big bundle of bills.
That trooper couldn't believe it. The (suspect's) eyes got big and he started
saying, 'That's not mine, that's not mine.'" Bullet retired in May
2001, after five years of service. The dog suffered occasional seizures
that were costly to treat. The department decided not to replace him.He
was sent to live out his life with Sgt. Franks and his family, and that's
what he did.
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BUDDY
October
12, 2007
jpg?
Handler: Detective
Mark Criscuolo
Bergen
County Sheriff's Department
10
Main Street
Hackensack,
New Jersey 07601
(201)
646-2200
Bergen
K-9 Buddy was a 9/11 veteran
For
a sleuth who spent his lifetime searching for the dead, Buddy the German
shepherd was still plenty frisky -- a "100-pound lapdog," say the Bergen
County sheriff's officers who handled him. "He just wanted to play. He
had a kind heart," said his handler, Detective Mark Criscuolo. "But he
also had a job just like you or me." For 10 years, Buddy was the go-to
canine given the most gruesome of jobs: sniffing out human remains. Until
he was euthanized one week ago due to an incurable spine ailment, he was
one of only three cadaver-sniffers in New Jersey. He left behind a resume
that is literally seven pages long -- and includes an infamous date.
The
morning of Sept. 11, 2001,
Criscuolo and Buddy raced in a Sheriff's Department van to the World Trade
Center, arriving just after the second tower crumbled. Criscuolo parked
at a nearby high school and made the heart-thumping march to the carnage.
"The smell was already there," Criscuolo said. "For Buddy, it was overwhelming."
Dogs have a sense of smell 200,000 times greater than humans, experts say.
Buddy led Criscuolo to several bodies over four 12-hour days, even as the
determined hound breathed the same dusty air that has led to so many human
ailments. "He did a good job," said sheriff's Capt. Michael Bradley, who
oversees K-9 training. "It's odd to say, but he did good." Overall, Buddy
worked 53 cases throughout the region for the Sheriff's Department, ranging
from the search for the body of a suicide victim who jumped off the Palisades
in
1999 to a 26-day hunt last year for a missing college student in a Pennsylvania
landfill. A crane operator later found the remains. "I'm always amazed
by these dogs," Sheriff Leo P. McGuire said. "We're talking about dogs
that help families get their loved ones back." Buddy wasn't considered
a workaholic, though. Big and especially loyal for his already-faithful
breed, he loved pizza -- all kinds. He slept on the Criscuolos' living
room couch. The family always kept a stash of tennis balls ready for him
to rip to shreds. He was also great with the Criscuolos' kids. Once, as
Buddy slept at the foot of the stairs, their 2-year-old son accidentally
stomped on his genitals. Flustered yet under control, Buddy simply stood
up and walked away. "If that was us, there's no way we'd act like that,"
Criscuolo said, laughing. In his final months, Buddy had a roommate
of sorts -- Harley, another shepherd who became his successor at the Sheriff's
Department. They got along, but Criscuolo said it was more a matter of
Buddy tolerating the younger, more chipper pooch. In the end, however,
it was a painful spine ailment that brought the veteran down. His handlers
don't know the scientific terminology -- nor do they really want to know.
They do recall that after Buddy was officially retired this spring, one
of his legs began dragging whenever he walked, followed by another leg
a few months later. Then he began falling down stairs at home. "There's
a special bond with police partners," McGuire
said.
"Even more so in this case, because people rely on their animals as a social
outlet, for affection and a love that is so pure. Buddy was a tremendous
asset to law enforcement and more." Last Friday night, after waiting as
long as he felt Buddy could bear, Criscuolo brought him to the Oradell
Animal Hospital in Paramus. There, veterinarians pushed a needle into Buddy's
hindquarters and introduced a dose of pentobarbital, an anesthetic to put
Buddy to sleep. The next dose stopped his heart. "It was two big things
of blue liquid and one small thing of clear liquid," Criscuolo said on
Thursday, tearing up. The detective was unable to say how he felt at that
moment. Bradley, his captain, spoke on Criscuolo's behalf. "Crushed," he
said. submitted by Jim Cortinia, dir. CPWDA
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BO
DOD ?

Handler: Officer
Scott Johnson
Indianapolis
Metropolitan Police Department
50
N. Alabama St.
Indianapolis,
IN 46204 PH: 317 327.3811
More
than a dozen solemn police officers watched inside a courtroom Wednesday
as a man was sentenced for fatally shooting one of their own. Bo, an 8-year-old
police dog, died at the end of an episode that began when Clinton Drew
Hernandez, 21, burglarized a house on Indianapolis' Southeastside. Hernandez
pleaded guilty in Marion Superior Court to seven of the 10 charges against
him, including burglary and interfering with a law enforcement animal.
He was sentenced to 20 years in prison. In May, Hernandez led police on
a 14-minute car chase, then took off on foot after abandoning his sport
utility vehicle in a field. Bo latched onto his leg, and he shot the dog.
Bo chased the man another block until the dog's partner, Indianapolis Metropolitan
Police Department Officer Scott Johnson , shot Hernandez. Bo died in his
partner's arms. "It's just like it happened yesterday," Johnson said after
the hearing. Johnson has gone through training with a new partner, Tex,
also a Belgian Malinois. But he misses his partner of five years. Johnson
did not testify, but he attended the hearing with his parents, members
of IMPD's K9 unit and other officers who wanted to show support. Deputy
Prosecutor Brian Poindexter asked Hernandez several times why he grabbed
the handgun from the seat of his red Chevy Blazer when the foot chase began.
Hernandez said he didn't know. "He picked up the gun because these people
were after him," Poindexter said later, pointing to the officers in the
gallery. "Bo served his purpose. He protected his handler." Magistrate
Amy Barbar gave Hernandez the maximum prison term possible under his plea
agreement, plus four years' probation. She said Hernandez's remorse rang
hollow and added that he was lucky his injuries were not life-threatening.
"It either shows full control on the part of officer Johnson or his complete
emotional upset (at the dog's injury) that you're still alive.
submitted by Brian Faulk & Jim
Cortina
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BOJAR
August
6, 2007
Handler: Officer
Shane Spencer
Tompkins
County Sheriff's Office
Public
Safety Building
779
Warren Road
Ithaca,
NY - 14850 | Phone: 607-257-1345
Sheriff's
office mourns death of canine Bojar - By Raymond Drumsta - Journal
Staff
Deputy
and K-9 officer Shane Spencer still talks about Bojar — the 8-year-old
German shepherd that worked with him at the Tompkins County Sheriff's Office
— in the present tense. “It's like it hasn't sunk in yet,” he said.
“I still look for him in the car and in his kennel.” Cayuga Medical
Center at Ithaca Recently stricken with agonizing, rupturing tumors, Bojar
died on Aug. 6, and Spencer, along with the sheriff's office, is mourning
his passing. That's the part that hasn't sunk in, yet, said Spencer, and
it's a far cry from the robust, keen, dutiful yet tender canine that came
to work with him in 2001. Bojar — pronounced ‘Bo-yar', which means “black
dog” in Czechoslovakian — was, with Spencer, one half of the Tompkins County
Sheriff's Office's K-9 unit. “Bojar and his handler, Deputy Shane Spencer,
were the first K-9 unit deployed with the Tompkins County Sheriff's Office
in over 20 years,” Sheriff Peter Meskill said in recent statement. “Bojar
and Deputy Spencer provided countless demonstrations to the public and
conducted many drug and building searches as well as assisted in looking
for lost persons and suspects who fled a criminal scene during his years
of service to Tompkins County.” Born in Czechoslovakia in 1999, Bojar
was picked by the Tompkins County Sheriff's Office from a group of dogs
acquired by the Onondaga County Sheriff's Office, Spencer said. Bojar was
chosen over a more aggressive dog, which eventually went to the Troy Police
Department, he said. Spencer said he was a bit nervous when he met
Bojar for the first time. Bojar, though, rolled over when Spencer knelt
to pet him, Spencer recalled — a clear invitation to have his belly scratched
and a sign of Bojar's great temperament. Bojar displayed that temperament
to children in countless demonstrations at schools and other community
events, Spencer said. “Bojar has touched a lot of hearts,” he said. As
the sheriff's K-9 unit, he and Bojar trained together — and were graded
together — at the Onondaga County Sheriff's Office canine school, Spencer
said. The pair went through and passed five weeks of narcotics school,
10 weeks of patrol school, and met and surpassed a 16-hour-per-month state
training requirement, he added. Through training and working together,
man and dog learned each other's rhythms, Spencer said. “I knew everything
about that dog, and he knew everything about me,” he said. In addition
to sniffing out drugs, Bojar was adept at tracking lost children, people
with Alzheimer's disease who'd gone missing and felony suspects, Spencer
said. He was trained, he said, to attack only if he was being attacked.
An invaluable law-enforcement asset, Spencer said, Bojar could flush suspects,
including burglars, from thick underbrush — by simply snarling. “People
surrendered because of Bojar,” he said. Despite racking up more than 30
of these “give-ups,” Bojar never bit anyone, he said. In addition
to working numerous drug busts, including two joint law-enforcement efforts
in Western New York, Bojar assisted agencies such as the Schuyler County
Sheriff's Office and police departments from Ithaca, Horseheads and Elmira,
Spencer said. To ensure drug-free environments, schools in Newfield, Enfield,
Dryden and Trumansburg called on Bojar to sniff for narcotics on their
grounds, Spencer said. Vigilant while on duty, Bojar was his partner, Spencer
said, watching his movements during traffic stops and other incidents.
Bojar “went bonkers,” he added, if he left the house in the K-9 vehicle
without him. “He protected me, and I protected him,” he said. Bojar
was with him always, he said. “He went home with me,” Spencer said. “If
I wasn't working he was right there with me.” But as he was leaving the
house one day recently, Bojar didn't go crazy as he normally did, Spencer
said, and that's when he knew something was wrong. “He just came out and
lay down,” he said. He immediately took him to the College of Veterinary
Medicine at Cornell University, where Bojar was found to have a ruptured
spleen caused by a tumor, Spencer said. During surgery to remove the spleen,
doctors discovered other tumors in Bojar's body, he added. Other than to
make Bojar comfortable with medicines, Spencer said, there was little the
doctors could do. “He was definitely in a lot of pain,” Spencer said. It
was that pain, and the other tumors causing more internal bleeding, that
forced the decision to have Bojar put down, Spencer said. “The longest,
saddest thing I've ever done was to drive my partner to the hospital to
have him put to sleep,” he said. “Bojar was a great asset to the Tompkins
County Sheriff's Office as well as countless other agencies in Tompkins
and the surrounding counties,” Meskill said. “His friendly, affectionate
attitude made him a hit with young and old alike. His service was invaluable
to the Sheriff's Office and the public we serve and he will be missed by
all.” While the sheriff's office plans to continue their K-9 unit, Spencer
said he is searching for an appropriate urn to hold Bojar's ashes and memorialize
him. “He will be in my heart and mind forever,” Spencer said. “He was a
member of my family, and we will miss him.” rdrumsta@ithacajournal.com
submitted by Renee' Konias
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BUDDY
April
30, 2007
Handler: ?
Cook County
Jail
add?
photo?
Illinois
On
April 30, retired Summit K-9 Buddy passed away from health complications.
He was 13 years old.
Buddy started out as someone’s pet and was donated to Cook County Forest
Preserve Police k-9 Training Center where he was paired up with an officer
from Cook County jail. He worked at the jail for two years until his handler
was injured and went of disability. In July of 1995, Officer Dubinka and
Buddy were teamed up and trained for six weeks at Cook County Jail. In
September of 1995, Dubinka and Buddy then trained at the Cook County Forest
Preserve District K-9 Training Center. Dubinka became a State Certified
K-9 Handler and Buddy as a Patrol Dog. In December of that year, Buddy
trained in article search, person search and handler protection. Buddy
was also certified in narcotics and tracking. Within his first few weeks
on the Summit Police Department, Buddy had his first currency seizure of
several hundred dollars. His first narcotics seizure was 81 pounds of marijuana
hidden in the body of a pick-up bed that had to be air-chiseled open to
retrieve it. Buddy also discovered two hidden compartments in the accomplice’s
vehicle, in a compartment containing six pounds of marijuana. Both vehicles
were seized. In 1997, Buddy scored number one in Narcotics Certification
and had the fastest time in search out of a group of more than 20 certified
K-9 dogs from all over the state of Illinois. Buddy’s largest drug seizure
was 2,210 pounds of marijuana stashed in hidden compartments in specialty
made furniture. The furniture had to be disassembled to retrieve the drugs
for the trailer it was shipped in. His largest currency seizure was more
than $800,000 for the D.E.A. Buddy also assisted in apprehending several
armed robbers and burglars. He was recognized five times with special awards
by the United State Police Canine Association. Buddy’s total amount of
currency seizure was approximately $3 million and the total narcotics seized
just over to and a half tons. Buddy retired in January 1, 2004 after ten
years in law enforcement. submitted by Renee' Konias
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BANDIT
August
13, 2007
Handler: Sgt. Tom
Lovejoy
Chandler
Police Department
250
East Chicago Street
Chandler,
Arizona 85225
Ph:(480)
782-4130
Mailing
Address:
Mail
Stop 303 - PO Box 4008
Chandler,
Arizona 85244-4008
K-9
dog dies after being left in hot patrol car
Eugene
Scott - The Arizona Republic - Aug. 13, 2007 04:59 PM
A
Chandler police dog that died after his handler left him unattended in
a hot patrol car was in the vehicle more than 12 hours before being discovered.
Sgt. Tom Lovejoy discovered the body of Bandit, his 5-year-old Belgian
Malinois, about 10 p.m. Saturday night. He parked the car at his home about
9:15 a.m. that day after working an extra duty assignment early Saturday
morning, police said. "When he arrived home, (Lovejoy) was out of his routine.
And while getting mixed up in everyday stuff,he forgot about the car,"
said Sgt. Rick Griner, a Chandler police spokesman. Griner said that shortly
after entering his home, Lovejoy was told his teenage son had been in a
car accident and the car was totaled. Griner did not have information on
whether Lovejoy's son was injured, but said the car accident may have distracted
Lovejoy - head of the department's K-9 unit - and caused him to forget
his dog, who would not have normally been with him on the extra duty shift.
The decision was made to include the dog on Lovejoy's patrol given several
recent high profile incidents, including the Chandler serial rapist case.
A preliminary investigation shows the dog, who was with the department
more than four years, died from extreme heat. This incident is under investigation
and will be handled internally, Griner said. Lovejoy, a 15-year veteran,
was not put on leave and returned to work Monday. Griner said no disciplinary
action has been taken and will not happen unless an investigation determines
the actions were reckless or intentional. "This is his worst punishment
right now. He's very emotional," Griner said. "This incident was because
of negligence; by accident." Russ Hess, executive director of the United
States Police Canine Association, said an investigation needed to be completed,
but added, "there's no excuse. There sure is a lack of judgment there."
Griner said Lovejoy's family is taking Bandit's death hard. The dog lived
with the Lovejoys the entire time he was with the department. While police
dogs that die in the line of duty are usually given high-profile funerals,
Griner said the department will likely have a private, memorial service
for Bandit. Two other Valley police departments also lost K-9 earlier this
year - one in a similar incident. In March, a Phoenix police dog was rushed
to a veterinarian after being left in an unmarked police vehicle without
ventilation. Authorities said the car was idling at the time, but the air-conditioning
may have malfunctioned. The handler and clinic employees decided to euthanize
Top, a 5-year-old black Labrador, the following day. The same month the
Mesa Police Department had a 2-year-old Belgian Malinois die while the
dog was chasing a suspect after the dog was struck by a vehicle on Main
Street near Lindsay Road.
******
Police Report *****
Chandler
Police K-9 Found Dead
UPDATE:August
13, 2007
Contact:
Sergeant Rick Griner - Public Information Officer
The
Chandler Police Department is saddened by the un-expected loss of one of
its K-9’s,
Bandit
a Belgian Malinois. Bandit was discovered deceased by his handler Sergeant
Tom Lovejoy on Saturday August 11th. Upon completing a duty assignment
and returning to his residence, Lovejoy unintentionally left Bandit in
his patrol vehicle. Lovejoy found Bandit later in the day when he returned
to his vehicle. Preliminary information indicates that Bandit succumbed
to the extreme heat of the day. The Chandler Police Department is conducting
an investigation regarding the circumstances surrounding this tragic event.
A photo of Bandit is attached. For further information contact Sergeant
Rick Griner. -END
Chandler
Police K-9 Investigation Update For
Immediate Release - Tuesday
August 14,
2007
CHANDLER,
AZ. After discussion of the circumstances of the incident involving the
loss of Chandler Police K-9 Bandit, and the fact that it occurred in an
unincorporated area under the jurisdiction of the County, the Chandler
Police Department contacted the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office to notify
them of the incident. The MCSO will conduct a criminal investigation
into this incident while the Chandler Police Department completes the internal
investigation. Sergeant Tom Lovejoy is currently on administrative leave.
Until the completion of the investigative process, it is not appropriate
for the department to make any further comments.
Chandler
Police Chief Releases Statement -Update
For Immediate Release - Wednesday
August 15,
2007
“The
Chandler Police Department appreciates the concerns expressed by citizens
regarding the tragic incident involving Sergeant Tom Lovejoy and his K-9
Bandit. This is a very difficult time and I clearly recognize the responsibility
we have to thoroughly review this incident and respond appropriately.
I assure you, the decisions we make will be based on a review of the entire
circumstances of this incident.”
Chief
Sherry Kiyler - Chandler Police Department
date:
Sept. 2007 The
Chandler police sergeant whose K-9 died after being left in his patrol
car was booked into jail today and faces misdemeanor animal cruelty charges.
Sgt.
Tom Lovejoy was booked into jail in Mesa earlier this afternoon. The Maricopa
County Sheriff’s Office is recommending one charge of animal cruelty. Lovejoy
could face up to six months in jail and a fine of $1,200 if he is found
guilty. “Our investigation determined that Bandit's death was not an intentional
act on Lovejoy's part,” Sheriff Joe Arpaio said, “but it was reckless and
for that, Lovejoy must be charged.” The sheriff's investigation shows Bandit
was in the patrol car from 9 a.m. to 10:10 p.m. on Aug. 11. During that
time, Lovejoy was running errands for his children, napping, then dining
out with his wife. Police Chief Sherry Kiyler released a statement Wednesday:
“The Chandler Police Department was informed today that the Maricopa County
Sheriff's Office has completed its criminal investigation regarding Sgt.
Tom Lovejoy and the death of K9 Bandit and that misdemeanor charges have
been filed. As a department, we respect and support the criminal justice
systems and processes in place. We remain saddened by the loss of K9 Bandit.
At this time our internal investigation is continuing and further comment
by our department would be inappropriate until the completion of this process.”
submitted
by Renee' Konias & Jim Cortina
update Jan. 2008
Legal
fight in K9 death targets deaths of Sheriff's dogs
Chandler
police sergeant whose K-9 died in a hot patrol car this summer hopes his
own animal abuse case can be dismissed by shedding light on the dog deaths
of the agency that arrested him. Counsel for Sgt. Tom Lovejoy filed a motion
in court Wednesday saying he will try to prove unfair treatment by the
Maricopa County Sheriff's Office, which "treated its own employees better
than it treated Sgt. Lovejoy under similar circumstances," including the
deaths of three Sheriff's K-9s, the court document shows.
Lovejoy
was arrested Sept. 5 by Maricopa County Sheriff's deputies on suspicion
of reckless animal abuse, after he forgot Bandit, a 5-year-old Belgian
Malinois dog, in his patrol car Aug. 11 for more than 12 hours.
Sheriff
Joe Arpaio held a press conference the day of Lovejoy's arrest, saying:
"I am certain Sergeant Lovejoy has suffered greatly from leaving his dog
in a sweltering car . . . I do not relish the idea of compounding his sadness.
However, Lovejoy must be treated like anyone else in similar circumstances."
Lovejoy
attorney Robert Kavanagh filed a public records request with the Sheriff's
Office in October and again in December for several documents including
agency and veterinary records of the Office's dogs - Ranger, Dax and Brando
- who died while in deputy care. Kavanagh wrote Wednesday that the
Office had not mailed the records, which cost his client nearly $1,000
in clerical fees, until Tuesday and requested more time to analyze the
findings and file a motion to dismiss Lovejoy's case. The Sheriff's Office
on Thursday released three requested dog death reports, concluding:
•
Ranger, a Bloodhound, died on Dec. 26, 2006 from acute respiratory failure
after battling Valley Fever.
•
Dax, a Belgian Malinois, died Sept. 13, 2000 after a reported fall from
a kennel.
•
Brando, a German Shepherd, died on Aug. 9, 2004 from heat exhaustion, the
case most similar to Bandit. Sheriff's Sgt. Joseph McLemore left Brando
in a shaded kennel with a full water supply at 5:30 p.m., but when McLemore
returned at 8:10 p.m., he found the dog lying in his kennel, dead. The
temperature that day rose to 112 degrees.
Kavanagh
could not be reached by phone Thursday and Lovejoy said he couldn't comment
on the case.
Lovejoy's
counsel believes the Sheriff's Office K-9 records will open up other avenues
for the case, such as witnesses and records, according to the court motion.
Lovejoy wants to dismiss the case by proving "selective enforcement" on
part of the Sheriff's Office - that they arrested Lovejoy on suspicion
of reckless animal abuse but did not arrest their own deputies in what
Lovejoy and his attorney believe is a similar circumstance.
Joey
Hamby, a criminal defense attorney not involved in the Lovejoy case, said
this type of defense may have some merit. "I wouldn't care if it was heat
exhaustion with a car or a kennel, if this is a dog that died from the
same reasons under the Sheriff's care, as a defense attorney that would
raise some red flags," Hamby said. Hamby said the Lovejoy camp is trying
to prove a double standard, and although a judge wouldn't give as much
weight to another case that is brought into question, "a bias, motive or
prejudice" would always be relevant. Arpaio said Thursday the circumstances
were not the same and Brando was left with enough water in a kennel, not
a car, and for two to three hours.
"I
don't understand why you go back to someone else's situation," Arpaio said.
"You ought to be addressing current charges. Bandit was left in a vehicle
unattended, so I'm not going to argue the current case to what (Lovejoy)
is saying happened years and years ago to one dog in the Sheriff's department
. . . apples and oranges." Lovejoy is scheduled for a status conference
on Jan. 30.
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BASCO
June 23, 2007
Handler: Officer
Chris Cameron
El Segundo Police
Department
348
Main Street
El
Segundo, CA 90245 - (310) 524-2255 or 2200
At
roughly 2:10 am, while driving home after his shift, K-9 Officer Kenny
McShane discovered two deceased dogs that appeared to have been hit by
an unknown vehicle in the area of El Segundo Boulevard and Oregon Street.
After stopping his police unit and upon closer inspection, Officer McShane
tragically recognized both dogs as belonging to his friend and co-worker,
El Segundo K-9 Officer Chris Cameron. The first dog was identified as Officer
Cameron’s partner and Police Canine, Basco. The second dog was Officer
Cameron’s personal pet, Bailey. Officer Cameron has been a K-9 officer
for nearly one year and a Police Officer
with
the Department for over 5 years. Both Basco and Bailey lived with Officer
Cameron in his El Segundo home. It appears that Basco and Bailey, who were
seen in Officer Cameron’s backyard a little after
midnight,
managed to break through a secured chain-link kennel fence and wander away.
Both dogs,
which
were extremely close, remained together and appeared to have both been
struck by the same vehicle shortly before being discovered on El Segundo
Boulevard by Officer McShane. Basco, a 7 _ year old Dutch Shepherd, served
the El Segundo Police Department for 5 years. Officer Cameron happily inherited
his
partner, when Basco’s first handler was selected for another special assignment.
During his service, Basco conducted over 160 narcotic and suspect searches,
which resulted in the seizure of over 100 kilos
of
cocaine, over $200,000 in narcotic tainted currency, and the recovery of
a loaded handgun that was
used
in the commission of a violent robbery. Bailey, a 4 year old mixed
Border Collie, was rescued by
Officer
Cameron when he found Bailey abandoned at the El Segundo dog park. Bailey
was only 6
weeks
old when Officer Cameron came to his rescue. Both Basco and Bailey were
family to
Officer
Cameron and he is devastated by this loss. The El Segundo Police Department
is
saddened
by this tragedy and anyone with information regarding this incident is
requested
to
contact the El Segundo Police Department at (310) 524-2255 or 2200.
No
services are planned but you may make donations to:
El
Segundo Police Department K-9 Trust Fund
Lieutenant
Ray Garcia
donations
to the El Segundo Police Department K-9 Trust Fund
to
Lieutenant Ray Garcia
,
made payable to “The El Segundo Police Department”,
348
Main Street, El Segundo, CA 90245
submitted
by Renee Konias & Jim Cortina
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BOBBI
DOD?
Handler:
Keigh Rowan
Grand
Forks Police Department
P.O.
Box 5548, Grand Forks, ND 58206-5548
122
S. 5th St.,Grand Forks, ND 58201
701-787-8000
- FAX 701-780-8253
Contact:
Sgt.
Dwight Love
Police
K-9 Bobbi has left a big hole in my heart today. My partner, my friend
and ever loyal companion
has
just past away. K-9 Bobbi worked with the Grand Forks Police Department
for just one year but
made
many friends and proved a K-9 unit as a staple for our department.His last
days were with me
and
my family on a short vacation. I will always miss my first patrol dog,
but know I will see him again someday. Current handler of K9 TAZ.
submitted
by Renee' Konais
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BRITTA
02/04/1993 - 07/25/2007
New Castle County
Police Department
Handler: S/Cpl
Anthony Scelsi
3601
N. Dupont Highway
New
Castle, DE 19720 - ph. 302-395-8171
S/Cpl
Anthony Scelsi and his wife,also a police officer,made the always difficult
decision to have Britta
put
down, when she could no longer walk and go through life without assistance.
A dignified end for
a
much loved and valued partner. "Britta, you may be gone from this Earth,
but you will never
be
gone from our hearts and minds."
Britta's
accomplishments : worked 01/01/1996-06/01/2004
1.
1998 -cited for BRAVERY in apprehension of burglary suspect who attempted
to disarm handler Cpl Scelsi while at Admiral Club Apartments, Newark DE.
2.
1999- cited for BRAVERY in apprehension of subject that was armed [twice],
this subject was homicidal and enroute to his workplace to kill his employer,subject
held officers at gunpoint.
Britta
apprehended subject while he was loading a .38 caliber and .380 automatic
handgun.
3.
1999- MERIT CITATION for locating weapon used in home invasion in WoodsEdge
Apartments, Wilmington DE.
4.
Britta searched Governor Printz Blvd for a distance of a mile during heavy
rain. The weapon
was
located in high weeds.
5.
Kiwanis Club recognized Britta twice for her actions while on duty.
|
submitted
by Dawn Lanhan
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BRONCO
July 21, 2007
Handler:
Officer Jerry Carpenter
Gallatin
Police Department
130
West Franklin Street
Gallatin,
TN 37066
Telephone:
(615) 452-1313 - Fax: (615) 452-1597 - E-mail:
info@gallatinpd.org
Canine
Officer Dies In Gallatin
A
canine officer for the Gallatin Police Department died Sunday night. Bronco,
a Belgian Malinois, died at home. The dog, born in 2000, began his law
enforcement training Nov. 12, 2001. Bronco served with the
Sumner
County Sheriff's Office until July 1, 2004 when he was transferred to the
18th Judicial Drug Task Force, according to a Gallatin police news release.
Bronco started with the Gallatin Police Department Feb. 1, 2006. Bronco's
handler was Field Training Officer Jerry Carpenter. The pair had more than
1,000 criminal narcotics convictions. A memorial service for Bronco
will be held Tuesday at the Gallatin Police Department. The service will
begin at 4 p.m. submitted
by Jim Cortina, Dir. CPWDA
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BLAZE
May 15, 2007
Handler:
Pam Stafford
Andover
Police Department
32
North Main Street
Andover,
MA 01810- (978) 475-0411
Whether
he was sniffing out armed suspects in the grass or chasing Frisbees thrown
by neighborhood children, Blaze was good at what he did. The retired five-year
Andover police dog, 11, was put to rest Tuesday following a cancer diagnosis.
"He looked like a big, burly dog, but he was really just a big baby," owner
Pam Stafford said. "He was a couch potato in retirement. And he was a good
police dog. I'm sure people will remember him." The fiery-red German shepherd
went into police training at age 2<1/2> when Stafford, a former Andover
resident, donated him to the department in 1999. He might have had a late
start, but Blaze was a quick learner. "People said you can't turn a house
dog into a police dog, but he did incredible, amazing," she said. He partnered
up with Officer Ed Higginbottom and quickly became well-known in area school
systems,
where
he and Higginbottom put on demonstrations for children. Blaze also spent
his five-year career searching
for
bank robbers, looking for Alzheimer's patients and sniffing out drugs in
motor vehicles throughout the Merrimack Valley. "He was great with the
kids," Stafford said. So much so, that in 2000, a third-grader at the South
School raised $484 to buy the German shepherd a black bullet-proof vest.Blaze
retired in 2003, and Higginbottom gave the dog back to Stafford, who had
moved to New Hampshire. "The best thing was having him come home," she
said. "He stepped right back into the role of being a house pet. He ran
around the backyard, slept on the couch, played with kids." Stafford found
out about the cancer on Tuesday after the dog hadn't been feeling good
for a few months. She said it was important to her that he didn't suffer.
"He was a tough guy that way. He didn't show it," she said. submitted
by Jim Cortina & L. Hewitt
(Late
Entry)
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BRITT
2006
Handler:
Dave Ireland
Norfolk Police
Dept.K-9 Unit
Norfolk,
Va. K-9 Unit
6101s
Cape Henry Ave.- Norfolk, VA
THE
RAINBOW BRIDGE
There
is a bridge connecting Heaven and Earth.
It
is called the Rainbow Bridge because of its many colors.
Just
this side of the Rainbow Bridge,
there
is a land of meadows, hills,
and
valleys with lush green grass.
When
a beloved pet dies,
the
pet goes to this place.
There
is always food and water and warm Spring weather.
Those
old and frail animals are young again.
Those
who have been maimed are made whole again.
They
play all day with each other.
But
there is only one thing missing.
They
are not with their special person
who
loved them on earth.
So
each day, they run and play until the day comes
when
one suddenly stops playing and looks up.
The
nose twitches, the ears are up,
the
eyes are staring and this one
suddenly
runs from the group.
You
have been seen
and
when you and your special friend meet,
you
take him or her in your arms and embrace.
Your
face is kissed again and again.
You
look once more into the eyes of your trusting pet, or partner.
Then
you cross the Rainbow Bridge together,
never
again to be separated.
~unknown
author submitted
by Karen S.
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BLITZ
March 14, 2006
need photo
Handler: Officer
Jim Bartley
Bellevue Police
Department
2207
Washington St.
Bellevue,
NE 68005 - 402 293.3100
Our
Department started its K-9 Unit in 1995 with a Dutch Shepard (Holland Herder)
named Nero. Nero was a dual purpose dog and was assigned to Officer
Jim Bartley. Nero was a fantastic dog and was a critical factor to
the success of our K-9 Unit to this day. Nero died in 2001.
We did have a service. Officer Bartley was then partnered with Blitz
in January of 2002. Blitz was also a dual purpose dog and was 4 years
old at the time of acquisition. Blitz was a Belgian Malinois and
came from Europe. Blitz was put to sleep in March 2006 because of
medical problems.I have attached a photo of Blitz and Officer Bartley.
If you need any more, please let me know. Thank you for your efforts.
submitted by Lt. Kurt M. Strachota - K-9 Unit Commander - Bellevue
Police Dept.
submitted
by Jim Cortina, Dir. CPWDA -
Bellevue
Police Dog Put Down 3/21/06 - NE The Bellevue Police Department lost
a valuable member of its police force last week. Blitz, a member
of the department's K-9 Unit since the late 1990s, was put to sleep March
14 after becoming too hard to control. Blitz had attacked his partner,
officer Jim Bartley, Police Chief John Stacey Jr. said. A neurological
disorder common with the Belgian Shepherd Malinois breed is possibly to
blame for the attack. Blitz and Bartley worked together on many assignments.
In early November, Blitz successfully took down a burglar who was uncooperative
and wielding a knife. The department is planning to retire another
of its aging dogs, Falco, within the next year and a half, Stacey said.
When that happens, Bellevue's canine contingent will be down to two. Some
business sponsors have stepped in, and the department should be able to
replace one of the two dogs in the near future, Stacey said. But funding
for a fourth dog still is uncertain, he said. Bellevue has had a
canine unit for at least 10 years, he said. A dog is on duty at all
times, he said. They are used primarily for two things: helping to catch
suspects and detecting drugs. "It's almost a daily basis now that
we require a canine in some form," Stacey said. For example, he said,
dogs were called twice March 14 - once for a traffic stop and the second
for a burglary in progress. Dogs that are healthy and performing
well usually can serve the department for up to 10 years, Stacey said.
Getting a replacement dog can cost up to $10,000, including training and
equipment costs, he said. If funding is not found for a fourth dog,
Stacey said, the department will scale back its K-9 Unit. "We can't support
it on our own," he said.
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BERRY
July 6, 2007
Need
photo
Handler:
Inglewood
Police Department
Captain
Percy Ray Roberts, Jr.
Commanding
Officer Patrol Bureau
(310)
412-5541 & K9 UNIT TEL 310-412-5153
1
Manchester Boulevard
Post
Office Box 6500
Inglewood,
California 90301
Inglewood
police dog is euthanized after being stolen and struck by car
An
Inglewood police dog stolen last week from his handler's yard in Covina
was struck by a car and had to be euthanized, officers said Friday. Berry,
a 3-year-old Belgian Malinois, was found Monday lying behind a business
near Azusa Avenue and Covina Boulevard in Covina, Inglewood police Sgt.
George Sanford said. Two days earlier, someone removed the dog from the
Inglewood police officer's backyard, Sanford said. Police officers who
partner with canines take them home at night. Officers did not say how
the dog was stolen.
No
one knows what happened in the two days that followed, but it appeared
Berry was the victim of a hit-and-run driver. County animal control officers
found the dog Monday. "The canine was suffering from severe injuries that
were consistent with being hit by a vehicle," Sanford said. The police
dog was taken to a pet hospital, but veterinarians deemed his injuries
too severe to be treated successfully, Sanford said.
The
K-9 dog had just joined the force and was recently deployed. The department
has two other police dogs.
Anyone
with information about the dog's theft and death is asked to call Covina
police at 626-858-4474 or
Inglewood
police at 310-412-5211. The crime involves theft and hit-and-run
driving. The Inglewood police dog's demise follows the death last month
of an El Segundo police dog also killed by a hit-and-run driver. Basco,
a 7 1/2-year-old German shepherd, escaped from his handler's yard in El
Segundo on June 23. The officer's pet border collie, Bailey, also got out
of the yard. A police officer found the dogs lying dead in the road at
El Segundo Boulevard and Oregon Street. Police requested the public's help
to find the driver, but no one has responded with word of what happened,
El Segundo police Lt. Bob Turnbull said. The department is accepting donations
for its canine trust fund. Checks made out to the El Segundo Police Department
can be sent to 348 Main St., El Segundo, CA 90245. submitted
by Jim Cortina, Dir. CPWDA
The
Department's K-9 unit consists of three K-9 handlers. The Inglewood Police
Department uses German Shepherds for its K-9 program. IPD's handlers regularly
compete in regional and state-wide police K-9 competitions.
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BASKO
June 23, 2007
photo
Handler - Chris
Cameron
Inglewood
Police Department
Captain
Percy Ray Roberts, Jr.
Commanding
Officer Patrol Bureau
(310)
412-5541
1
Manchester Boulevard
Post
Office Box 6500
Inglewood,
California 90301
K9
UNIT TEL 310-412-5153
submitted
by Jim Cortina
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BRUNO
June 1, 2007
Handler:
Detective Mark Thomas (?)
Beacon
Police Department
8
Ferry St.- Beacon, New York 12508
(845)831-4111
Beloved
police dog's service remembered Bruno was well known member of Beacon
force
6/8/07
New York By Leigh Gomez Poughkeepsie Journal
Detective
Mark Thomas and Bruno meet Beacon school district DARE program students
in May 2002. A beloved police dog was laid to rest earlier this week after
battling a debilitating disease that slowly took away his ability to move
- Bruno Almond. "He was the best K-9 dog we had in our unit," said Richard
Sassi, who was police chief during Bruno's tenure. "Put him in any situation
- high stress" and the dog would react quickly or "with a six-month-old
baby and he'd lick him to death." The 13-year-old German shepherd
had degenerative myelopathy, which caused progressive paralysis, but he
never lost his spunk, said Detective Mark Thomas, his handler. Bruno
retired from the city Police Department in 2003. His final days were spent
basking in the sun and relaxing in the cool grass. Throughout the 10 years
Bruno served and protected the city streets, he touched the lives of many.
The dog is one reason resident Etha Grogan said her son, Dustin James,
wanted to become part of a K-9 unit. The
21-year-old, who met Bruno 13 years ago, is pursing a career in law enforcement.
Residents recognized Bruno's name more quickly than they did city police
officers, Grogan said.
The
canine made appearances at Marist College, Milton Elementary School and
before local Boy Scouts troops. He participated in the city school district's
Drug Abuse Resistance Education program. Mayor Clara Lou Gould said
children would line up down the city block just to pet Bruno on the Spirit
of Beacon Day. While loved by children, he wasn't so popular among
criminals. Once, a Main Street apartment was broken into and Bruno detected
criminals hiding in a crawl space in the closet, Thomas said. Bruno barked
and "alerted me, which otherwise the police would've missed," he said.
"The day we had to put him down, although I'm not still on the force, I
still feel a loss," Sassi said. "He was a good dog."
submitted by Jim Cortina
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BAXTER
June 5, 1995 –
November 19, 2006
lost story on BAXTER...
HELP
need info
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BARRY
March 6, 2007
photo
Handler: Officer
Mark Petersen
ESCONDIDO
POLICE DEPARTMENT
700
West Grand Avenue
Escondido,
CA 92025 - Ph 760 839-4722
A
police dog that suddenly went into a seizure while trying to apprehend
a suicidal suspect in a double shooting in February was diagnosed with
a brain tumor and had to be euthanized recently, a lieutenant said.The
9-year-old Belgian Malanois dog named Barry was put down March 6 after
veterinarians told police even surgery would not improve his quality of
life, police Lt. Mark Wrisley said. "He did a good job for us," Wrisley
said of the police dog. The lieutenant said it was a difficult decision
and was tough on his partner, Officer Mark Petersen because Barry was due
to retire this year anyway. Barry was initially assigned to another officer
but was transferred to Petersen when the other officer retired. The police
dog's last assignment was a SWAT standoff that occurred Feb. 18 on Parktree
Lane when a man fatally shot a roommate and wounded a second in the face,
then asked officers to shoot him. Wrisley said Barry's medical condition
had apparently been developing without their knowledge, so when he started
having a seizure, no one knew what was wrong. The dog was scooped up and
rushed to a veterinarian where he was eventually diagnosed. Petersen will
eventually be assigned a new police dog.
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BAK
March 30, 2007
waiting for phone
call or email from Cpl. Jackson for picture....
Handler: Cpl.
Glenn Jackson
Jeffersonville
Police Dept.
501
E. Court Ave.
Jeffersonville,
IN 47130 PH:(812)283-6633
The
Jeffersonville K-9 unit that was killed late last month during an arrest
was apparently shot by a Jeffersonville police officer in self-defense.
Bak, a 5-year-old Czech Shepherd, was shot by Officer Isaac Parker when
Bak turned his aggression towards him during a March 30 foot pursuit of
a juvenile suspect, according to a police report obtained Wednesday by
The Evening News and The Tribune.
Jeffersonville
police were called to Gardenside Apartments about 12:45 a.m. after receiving
reports that shots had been fired in the area, according to a press release
issued by the department. Officers attempted to stop two vehicles that
were seen leaving the area — one of which was pulled over without incident.
Two suspects from the other vehicle fled on foot near the intersection
of Highland Avenue and Plank Road, after which several officers were dispatched,
including Bak and his handler, Cpl. Glenn Jackson. Bak was released near
the 1600 block of East Tenth Street to search for a juvenile suspect, but
Jackson had been unable to announce the dog’s release over his radio due
excessive radio traffic. As a result, Parker — who was pursuing the suspect
from another direction — was not aware of Bak’s presence in the area, the
report says. Parker reportedly did not even know the dog he shot in the
chest and killed to be Bak until Jackson arrived on scene and identified
him. “Unaware that K-9 Bak had been released and not recognizing him in
the darkness, Officer Parker believed him to be an aggressive stray dog,”
JPD Detective Cpl. Todd Hollis writes in the press release. “Bak’s attention
was drawn to Officer Parker, who was giving loud verbal commands and advancing
on the suspect.” Hollis, Bak’s former handler, said during an interview
Wednesday afternoon that Bak was not trained to recognize a police uniform
and would only react to behaviors. “The dog most likely did not see the
suspect that had gotten over a fence and was actually in the process of
surrendering,” Hollis said. “What he saw was an officer with a weapon,
shouting, and he focused on that as his target.” Hollis said after
an investigation, the department found no fault in Officer Parker’s actions.“What
the officer did was protect himself,” Hollis said. “He acted appropriately.”
As a third-shirt officer, Parker was not available for comment Wednesday,
but Hollis said he had been extremely upset over the loss of the dog. “Officer
Parker was very close to our K-9 units and worked with them every day on
the street,” he said. “He was very fond of Bak and had even helped to train
him.” While Hollis didn’t want to speculate on what may have happened
had Parker known the dog advancing on him to be Bak, he said he hoped Parker
would have reacted in exactly the same way. “I don’t want to speculate
on what he would have done (had he known the dog to be Bak), but I know
he did the right thing, regardless,” he said. JPD Assistant Chief Mark
Lovan called the incident a “tragic accident” to which darkness and “a
lot of commotion” played a significant role. On Monday evening, JPD held
a memorial service in Bak’s honor at Scott Funeral Home, where Jackson
and Hollis spoke of the dog’s love for police work. “(Bak) was just
always ready to work,” Hollis said following the service. “It didn’t matter
if it was cold or hot, raining or snowing; he was ready to do what you
asked him to do. And when work was over, he was a great companion.”
Jackson described Bak as “eager to work” and “full of life.” Bak
joined JPD in February 2004 and was trained in narcotics detection, tracking
and searching. During his three years with the department, Hollis said
Bak was instrumental in the arrest of several suspects and in numerous
drug seizures. Hollis said JPD has two other active K-9 units and
one in training. All but one of the suspects were apprehended during
the March 30 pursuit, but none of them have been directly linked to the
alleged shooting. Hollis said no victims were found at Gardenside Apartments.
all SUBMITTED BY JIM
CORTINA
Follow up
Published
April 10, 2007 11:24 am - Sgt. Joe Hubbard fought back tears as he slowly
placed both hands on the podium in front of him, took a deep breath and
looked out at a chapel full of his fellow Jeffersonville Police officers.
Jeffersonville
Police remembers lost K-9 By
JENNIFER
RIGG
Sgt.
Joe Hubbard fought back tears as he slowly placed both hands on the podium
in front of him, took a deep breath and looked out at a chapel full of
his fellow Jeffersonville Police officers.“I have always believed that
God has a special place for his animals and that one day we’ll see them
again upstairs,” he said, his voice breaking. “I bet if we could look into
Heaven right now, we would see Bak running in circles around the legs of
God just waiting for his next orders.” Bak — a 5-year-old Czech Shepherd
and K-9 unit with the Jeffersonville Police Department — was shot and killed
during an arrest made in the early morning hours of March 30. JPD Assistant
Chief Mark Lovan following the memorial service declined to release further
details surrounding the dog’s death or the incident — which reportedly
resulted in a felony arrest — citing an ongoing investigation. Bak’s
handler, 41-year-old Cpl. Glenn Jackson, and several JPD officers gathered
Monday evening at Scott Funeral Home along Veterans Parkway to pay tribute
to his three years of service. “I’m sure some people would look at
this and ask, ‘You’re doing all this for a dog?’” said Bak’s former handler,
JPD Detective Cpl. Todd Hollis after the service. “But if you’ve ever been
a handler, you understand how much dedication it takes for these dogs to
do what they do. Here’s this dog who rides around in your backseat that
is ready and willing to give their life for you. “(Bak) was just
always ready to work,” he continued. “It didn’t matter if it was cold or
hot, raining or snowing; he was ready to do what you asked him to do. And
when work was over, he was a great companion. Giving him up was one of
the hardest things I had ever had to do.” Bak joined JPD in February
2004 and was trained in patrol and narcotic detection. During his three
years with the department, Hollis said Bak was instrumental in the arrest
of several suspects and in numerous drug seizures. Jackson, Bak’s current
handler, chose not to speak at the memorial service, but said afterward
that going to work without Bak had been extremely difficult. “He
was always so eager to work,” he said. “He was so full of life. He never
stopped moving. The hard part is going and getting in that car, knowing
he won’t be running around it wanting to get in.”
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In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BRONCO
November
9, 2006
Handler: Officer
Rich Gerber
Mentor
Police Department
8500
Civic Center Blvd
Mentor,
Ohio 44060 - (440)974-5760
A
7-year canine member of the Mentor Police Department died Thursday after
an "unfortunate accident," police said Friday. Bronco, one of two K9 units
at the department, was killed at about 8:15 p.m. near his home in Mentor,
Lt. Tom Powers said. "He got loose from home and, for whatever reason,
ran out in front of a car on Garfield Road," Powers said. "He was an important
member of our department. We're all saddened and feel bad for the handler
and his family." Powers said Bronco had been part of "many major investigations
and arrests in his career" and died only a year short of his retirement.
Earlier this year, Bronco and his handler, Officer Rich Gerber, received
an Outstanding Service Award from the North American Police Work Dog Association.The
80-pound German shepherd was born in the Czech Republic in 1999 and lived
in Gerber's home until his death.
Plans
for a memorial in honor of Bronco were being discussed Friday night, Powers
said.
Officer
Gerber & K-9, Bronco
* 2000 GSDCA/Bil Jac Foods: Hero Dog—Rookie of the Year
* 2000 Officer of the Year: Mentor Police Department
* 2001 GSDCA/Bil Jac Foods: Hero Dog—Narcotics Detection Dog of the Year
* 2003 GSDCA/Bil Jac Foods: Hero Dog—Honorable Mention
* 2006 North American Police Work Dog Association: Outstanding Service
Award
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BROCK
January 18, 2007
Handler: Constable
Keith Fleury
Brockville
Police Dept.
P.O.
Box 2050 - 2269 Parkedale Avenue
Brockville,
ON K6V 6N5
Phone:
(613) 342-0127 - Fax: (613) 342-0452
info@brockvillepolice.com
Brockville
police are mourning the loss of a law-enforcement trailblazer in this city.
Brock, a 14-year-old long-haired German shepherd who served as the force's
first police dog for seven years until his retirement in 2004, died Thursday
morning. He had been living with a family in the Smiths Falls area
since last year, said Constable Keith Fleury, who partnered with Brock
when the force's canine unit began in 1997. Fleury said the dog suffered
a stroke on Wednesday. "I was really happy that the last year of his life
he got to spend it with a whole family," said Fleury. "It was nice that
he was loved that much for the last year. For me, that gave me a lot of
relief that he was being pampered, the way I would have liked to," he added.
Brock retired from frontline police duties in 2002, but continued with
the force on drug-sniffing detail for another two years. Although he lived
with Fleury's family, Fleury explained Brock associated him with work,
so he could never truly relax and enjoy his time off the job as just a
pet. "You'd hear him whine and cry when I went to go to work because he
wanted to go," said Fleury. It was the reason that he decided to give the
dog to an adoptive family for a "deserved" retirement rest. He called Brock
"one hell of a dog," who in his years with the force proved the value of
the canine unit. "If it hadn't been effective, I don't think we'd have
had the program after Brock retired," stated Fleury, a 16-year veteran
of the force. Chief Barry King recalled two of Brock's biggest collars:
a $14-million drug bust on Highway 401 and tracking a suspect wanted in
connection with 18 break-ins. In all, he was credited with assisting
in 100 arrests. "Him being our first, had it not gone well we might not
have extended and carried on," said the chief, who greeted Brock's death
with "extreme sadness." "He's not a tool. He was a living, breathing
being here," said King, who added Brock was beloved by the hundreds of
children he met. Brock's legacy with the force is its two existing
canine teams - Constable Shawn Borgford and his dog Trax and Constable
Mike Grant and Sep."It's definitely a loss. It's one that every handler
would feel," said Borgford. "It's an unconditional relationship that they
have with their handlers as well as the city they work for." He said the
poem Guardians of the Night by an unknown poet best sums up the bond between
a police service dog and their handler. Quoting the poem, Borgford said
in part.
"And
when our time together is done/And you move on in the world/Remember me
with
kind thoughts
and tales/For a time we were unbeatable/Nothing passed among us undetected."
Brock's
remains have been cremated and King said the force will pick up the tab
for a private service for the dog, which is part of the contract with their
handlers. And while Fleury consciously kept a distance from Brock after
sending him to his adoptive home, he's delivering something special to
the family: Brock's badge, No. 911. "I'm making sure his badge goes with
him," said Fleury. submitted by Jim Cortina
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In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BEAR
November 26, 2006
Handler:
Officer
Brandon Rothwell
Nisswa
Police Department
P.O.
Box 128, Nisswa MN 56468
5442
City Hall Street, Nisswa MN 56468 - 218-829-4749
Officer
Rothwell joined the Nisswa Police Department in 2002. He is a graduate
of Crosby-Ironton High School. Before joining the police department, Rothwell
was a jailer for the Crow Wing County Sheriff's Department. Rothwell enjoys
hunting, fishing, and boxing. K9 Bear joined the Nisswa Police Department
in 2004. He is certified in narcotics detection and is also used for tracking.
K9 Bear, narcotics K9, died of cancer. submitted
by R. Konias & Jim Cortina
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BRONCO
DOD ? March
14 ? 2006
picture?
Handler:?
Spartanburg
County Sheriff's Office
8045
Howard Street
Spartanburg,
South Carolina 29303 - (864)503-4500
Kris
Mau News Channel 7 Monday, March 20, 2006
Upstate
officers are mourning the loss of one of their own. Bronco is a K-9 who
passed away last week.
He
helped find drugs. His partner, Scott Broome, says the dog
had a lot to offer. "There's just a
special
relationship that can't be described between a handler and their dog and
the things that
they're
able to accomplish together," says Broome. And the duo did accomplish a
lot in their eight
years
together. "In 1999 and 2000, we were the state of South Carolina
top Aggressive Criminal
Enforcement
team," says Broome. "We had the most felony arrests of any municipality
in the state
with
a population of 10,000 or more."Broome says Bronco had an effect in fighting
crime. "Most people
would
rather fight a police officer than fight a dog." He remembers the
dog's presence had an
effect
even during a routine traffic stop. "(the suspects) are in the back of
the patrol car, and one
guy
looks at the other one and says, "Do you have any drugs on you?" He said,
"No, I knew we
were
coming through Greer." Bruno retired with Broome and his family a few years
ago. A few
weeks
ago, Broome started taking pictures of the dog. And lots of them. It's
because he became
sick.
He could tell Bruno was having serious trouble walking. "A week later we
found out it was a
tumor
that was wrapped around his neck," says Broome. "His spinal collumn was
pushing his
esophagus
closed." Just like Bruno took his community in his grasp, protecting
it by finding drugs,
Broome
held him tightly while he was put to sleep. He says he'll never forget
his partner. "A week
ago
today, I was able to take him on patrol with me one last time," says Broome.
"And I put him
in
the back of my patrol car and seeing his head in the back like we used
to be, riding around and
him
looking around, it was real comforting to me to be able to take in that
last day." A perfect dog
for
her. Randall went through 100 dogs before the kennel worker brought out
Branco. “There was
an
instant connection,” Randall said. She knew that Branco was the one she
would be working,
training
and living with 24-7. It didn’t take long for Randall to see how much of
an asset Branco
would
be to her, both professionally and personally. When Randall and Branco
were in training
together
at the police academy, trainers were amazed at Branco’s ability to learn
quickly and his
willingness
to work hard. One trainer called him the “’Ferrari’ of the K-9 dogs.” “I
was so totally
amazed
and so impressed about what (the dogs) did,” Randall said. Randall and
Branco performed
thousands
of community services by fighting crime and drugs, as well as visiting
schools, businesses,
churches
and other organizations. “We’ve met a lot of good friends over the last
six years,”
Randall
said. On one occasion, Branco and Judy were asked to visit the mentally
challenged
children
at Enterprise High School. While Randall was a little nervous about how
Branco would
do
with the teens, he showed that he was kind as well as hard-working. “Branco
sensed immediately
that
they were somebody special,” Randall said. Branco lay on the floor and
allowed the teens to
pet
and pull at him for an hour, without a single growl or snap. “I could
really trust him around
children,”
Randall said. But Branco also knew when to be a police dog. Branco was
an aggressive
indicator
when he searched for drugs. He would bite, scratch or bite where he thought
the drugs
were
located. Branco had such a great work ethic, he would search freestyle
better than an officer
directed
search, Randall said. He also served as a sentry and would let Randall
know if anyone
was
within several feet of the truck when they were out on patrol. Branco was
known for protecting
his
partner by warning a drunk man that entered the Randall’s home and even
an officer trying to
play
a trick on Randall. He made sure Randall was always safe. He not only protected
Randall,
but
he was also a wonderful drug sniffing dog. There were numerous occasions
when Branco found
drugs
hidden in vehicles, apartments, the jail and even the court. During their
career together,
Randall
and Branco were asked to work with the drug court as trackers. They would
stop into the
homes
of drug court clients to ensure they were staying clean. “It was one of
the greatest
experiences
I could’ve ever been able to have,” Randall said. Together, Randall
and Branco
have
worked with every law enforcement agency in Washington County and even
some in Iron,
Utah
and Mohave, Ariz., counties. “Every day we would leave the house and I’d
say ‘Let’s go
get
the bad guys’ and he would get excited and circle around,” Randall said.
“We had the
highest
stats overall in the department last month. It’s because we just love the
job.” “He was
part
of my family,” Randall said. As Tersigni put it, Branco will be missed.
The staff at the
Hurricane
Valley Journal would like to extend their condolences to Deputy Randall
and her
family.
We would like to thank Branco and Randall for all their hard work and service
to
the
citizens of this community. submitted by Jim Cortina, DIR. CPWDA
In
Loving Memory of
SGT.
ADAM LEIGH CANN & MWD BRUNO
January 5, 2006
Ramadi,
IRAQ
Injured
military dogs back on duty, but without handler
Sgt.
Adam L. Cann was killed in attack on Ramadi police station
Stars
and Stripes - Mideast edition, Thursday, January 19, 2006
Courtesy
of Joseph Manning
Dog
handler Marine Sgt. Adam L. Cann stands with his dog Bruno in Iraq. Cann
was killed in a suicide attack this month in Ramadi. BAGHDAD
— The three military working dogs injured in this month’s deadly suicide
attack on a Ramadi police recruiting event have been treated and returned
to duty, medical officials told Stars and Stripes this week.The bombings,
which came at the end of a four-day recruiting drive that saw more than
1,000 Iraqi men sign up as police candidates, killed at least 27 volunteers,
U.S. Army Lt. Col. Michael E. McLaughlin and Sgt. Adam L. Cann, a Marine
Corps dog handler. Two other dog handlers were injured. Cann’s
dog, Bruno, and two other working dogs were injured in the blast. Initially,
military officials reported that Bruno would be flown to the States for
treatment. But in an e-mail this week to Stripes, Dr. (Lt. Col.) R. Randall
Thompson, of the 72nd Medical Detachment (Veterinary Service-Forward) said
all three dogs were treated in Baghdad by military veterinarians at the
10th Combat Support Hospital in Baghdad. “Sergeant Cann’s canine partner,
Bruno, was … transported to the Military Working Dog referral center located
in the International Zone,” Thompson wrote. “Bruno was treated for shrapnel
wounds and returned to his place of duty five days later. All three injured
dogs were treated by the 72nd following [medical evacuation]. All will
recover fully. Prior to the arrival of the 72nd and its enhanced treatment
capability, they would have been flown [to the States] for treatment.”
Cann, 23, and his German shepherd were part of the 2nd Military Police
Battalion, 2nd Force Services Support Group. Marine dog handlers in Iraq
are a tightknit group and have taken Cann’s loss hard. Friends said he
was happiest when he and Bruno were at work outside the wire. Cann
had worked with Bruno for five or six years, including a tour in Afghanistan,
they said. “He loved dog training,” Cpl. Brian Trielle said in the days
after the attack. “He took it very seriously. I’ve never met a better Marine
doing what he did.” submitted
by Jim Cortina, Dir. CPWDA
Bruno,
who apparently drowned in the Vaal River, led to a second tragedy when
police dog Bruno also lost his life. Inspector Sammy de Ridder, who
nearly drowned when the pair landed in the river during the search, was
in hospital for observation on Monday night. De Ridder and Bruno
were among those searching for Louis Louw, 29, who apparently drowned about
14:00 on Sunday after swimming and fishing in the river with friends. Sunday's
search was unsuccessful and the search resumed on Monday morning. De Ridder
and Bruno were in a boat that capsized in a strong current at a weir and
they ended up in a whirlpool. Two police divers found De Ridder, but Bruno
had drowned. De Ridder and Bruno had worked together for the past six years
and were inseparable. He used to refer to the dog as a family member and
friend. Bruno was one of only four dogs in the Free State trained to sniff
out bodies. The other three are in Sasolburg, Bethlehem and Bloemfontein.
submitted
by Jim Cortina, Dir. CPWDA
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
BRUNO
July 18, 2006
Handler -
Staff Sergeant Erik Castro
U.S. Air Force
- Keesler Air Force Base, Biloxi, Mississippi
81st
Training Wing
Public
Affairs Office
517
L Street, Roo | |