In
Loving Memory of
K-9
EDDY
November
19,2007
Handler: Cpl. Erin
Lunford
Los
Gatos-Monte Sereno Police Dept.
110
E Main St
Los
Gatos, CA 95030 Ph: (408) 354-8600
email:
police@losgatosca.gov
When
people lose a pet, it is often a heart-wrenching event. But when Eddy the
K9 died suddenly last week,
Los
Gatos-Monte Sereno Police Cpl. Erin Lunford lost not only his dog, but
also his longtime partner.
Eddy,
who was purchased by the police department in June 2001, was the second
German shepherd to join the K9 unit. He and Lunford were patrol partners
until last August, when Eddy was given an early retirement. "Age-wise,
he would have been ready to retire pretty soon," Lunford said. "But there
were other things in the department I wanted to do, so I asked if
he could retire (early)." Lunford added, "In the last year he slowed
down a lot. But we had no idea he had any problems." Eddy died Nov.
19 after collapsing while playing fetch. "My wife threw the ball twice,
and he came back and sat down. I threw it one more time and he fell over
when he got to the ball. His breathing was really bad." Lunford rushed
him to an emergency veterinary hospital in Campbell, where he died at around
10:45 p.m. "He was my partner. He was there when I needed him," Lunford
said. "He'd only complain if I didn't take him to work. Then my wife
would call and say he was tearing up the yard because he was mad at me.
He lived to work." Ironically, just hours before Eddy died, the Los
Gatos Town Council agreed to let Lunford purchase him for $1. Lunford says
since Eddy did not die in the line of duty, there will not be a police
memorial. Instead, he and his family will mark Eddy's passing privately.
submitted by Lulu & Jim
Cortina
LG
officer Erin Lunford and "Eddy" in a file photo.... (George Sakkestad/Los
Gatos Weekly-Times)
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
ENDY
August
9, 2007
emailed
webmaster for photo
Handler: Sgt.
Shannon Massey
Pascagoula
Police Department
PO
Box 1385
Pascagoula,
Mississippi 39568
(601)762-2211
Beloved
police drug dog dies - Endy was close to retirement
Pascagoula
police spent Thursday remembering one of their own. Endy, the Police Department's
seven-year-old veteran K-9 officer, died Thursday, just weeks before his
scheduled retirement. The Belgian Malinois dog born in Germany died unexpectedly.
He'd been recently diagnosed with hip dysplasia. "Endy specialized in narcotics
intervention and apprehension and excelled in both," Lt. Paul Leonard said
Thursday. "Endy will be remembered by many schoolchildren from his trips
to area schools and the demonstration of his abilities. All that had the
pleasure to work with him will miss him." The police department used a
$7,000 donation from resident Bob Green, owner of PEMCO Naval Engineering
Works in Pascagoula, to buy the beloved police dog. Over the years, Endy
and his handler, Sgt. Shannon Massey, went on drug searches, working with
the Pascagoula Police Department as well as other South Mississippi law
enforcement agencies to seize illegal narcotics and catch suspected criminals.
Endy and Massey have been credited over the years with making numerous
drug seizures and suspect apprehensions. Massey was at home with his family
Thursday and not available for comment.
Leonard
spoke on Massey's behalf, saying, "Endy was an integral part of his (Massey's)
family, and he'll be missed at their home." Endy was brought to the United
States as a puppy. He was purchased in Laurel and later trained in police
K-9 work at a training center in Hattiesburg. Local businesses paid the
costs to train Endy. "We'll miss him," said Leonard.
submitted
by Jim Cortina, Dir. CPWDA
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
ENZO
August
8, 2007
 
Handler:
Constable Kayne Cording
Bay of Plenty Police
Department
1215
HINEMOA STREET
ROTORUA
- NEW ZEALAND
TEL
- (07) 349-9444 - FAX (07) 343-1606
julian.sewell@police.govt.nz

Enzo
- pictured training with Constable David Hill,
tracked
the suspect across rural land for 5-6km before his death.
Police
dog dies during pursuit of wanted man In THE LINE OF DUTY:
Police
dog Enzo was reportedly drowned after pursuing a man through dense bush
in the Bay of Plenty.
Police
are tonight hunting a man after a Bay of Plenty police dog died while chasing
the man into bush. The death of three-year-old Enzo came two weeks after
Cane, one of the country's top police dogs, suffered a savage knife attack
near Rotorua. Cane has since been retired. Today's death came after police
tried to arrest a man wanted on a warrant for a family violence offence.
Enzo's handler, his family and work colleagues were distraught over the
death, Western Bay of Plenty area commander Inspector Mike Clement said.
Mr Clement said police went to an address on State Highway 29, 20km south
of Tauranga, about 9.30am to try to find the wanted man. "As they arrived
at the address he ran into nearby bush and the police dog team was then
called to assist. "The dog tracked the offender for 5-6km across rural
land in places through dense bush and eventually, the offender was sighted."
Police challenged the man to stop but he ran into nearby bush pursued by
the police dog. "A short time later the handler located his dog dead,"
Mr Clement said. "Enzo was carried from the bush by his handler over several
hundred metres to the nearest vehicle access." Police have not said how
the dog died but TV One reported that it drowned. Police took a man into
custody at about 5.30 pm. "Enzo, who has been an operational police dog
for 18 months in Tauranga, was considered to be an outstanding police dog
and naturally his handler, family and work colleagues are distraught about
the tragic death," Mr Clement said. Enzo was the 22nd police dog to have
been killed on duty in the past 34 years, he said. The Police Department
operates 110 general purpose dog teams throughout the country. A 20-year-old
man will appear in Tauranga District Court tomorrow, police said.
follow
up:
Police
dog's killer convicted 12/19/07 New Zealand
Police
dog Enzo's killer was convicted today, to the delight of the dog's former
handler and family. Tairyn Murphy, a 27-year-old labourer, was convicted
in Tauranga District Court of killing the police dog without lawful excuse,
an offence punishable by up to two years' jail. Murphy was remanded in
custody to be sentenced on January 15. Enzo died on August 9 when police
went to a Bay of Plenty property looking for Murphy who was wanted for
family violence offences. Murphy was tracked by Enzo and his handler Constable
Kayne Cording for a considerable distance before Enzo was released when
they were close to Murphy. "However, Enzo - who caught him - was drowned
by Murphy before Constable Cording could intervene," Western Bay of Plenty
area commander Inspector Mike Clement said today. Murphy maintained he
had punched Enzo in self defence but this explanation was not accepted
at the time or by the court, Mr Clement said. "Constable Cording and his
family were devastated at the time when they lost Enzo - a family member
and mate. "Constable Cording, who gave evidence during the
hearing, was joined in court by members of his family, including his wife,
and were naturally thrilled with the result." Mr Clement said Mr Cording
had been busy since Enzo's death, working with a replacement dog and training
a puppy. Enzo was honoured at a service to remember deceased police officers,
held at the Royal New Zealand Police College in September. He was the 22nd
police dog killed on duty in the past 34 years. UPDATE:
2008
Man
jailed for killing police dog 1/14/08 New Zealand
LIFE
CUT SHORT: Police dog Enzo who was killed while on duty.
Tairyn
Murphy, 27, a Welcome Bay labourer, was also sentenced to one month in
prison for resisting police,
a
term he will serve concurrently. Judge Christopher Harding said the deliberate
drowning of three year old
Enzo
during a large manhunt in the lower Kaimai Ranges last August had had a
significant effect not only on the dog's handler, but on his wife and young
children as well as on Western Bay of Plenty police members.
Handler
Kayne Cording was given permission to read his victim impact report aloud
in court. As he told of the "exceptional" young police dog, Murphy repeatedly
looked and grinned at his partner and son seated in the public gallery.On
entering the dock he had pushed back a long sleeve to reveal a bandaged
lower arm.
Constable
Cording said all the time and effort he had put into training Enzo had
been wasted by Murphy's actions. He was now training a new dog which required
him to spend two months away from his family.
After
Enzo's death the constable said he had been removed from the armed offenders
squad at a loss of
about
$9000 a year in income. The killing of Enzo had been "unnecessary, senseless
and deliberate" and
had
caused him much soul searching about whether to take on another dog. Murphy's
lawyer Nicholas
Dutch
said his client was remorseful and felt very badly about the dog dying.
The offence was out of character for a man with no significant history
of violent behaviour. Enzo had bitten the fleeing Murphy on both wrists
and an ankle but he did not set out deliberately to kill the dog, Mr Dutch
said. Before
handing
down sentence, Judge Harding summed up the events leading to the death.
Police had visited an address in the lower Kaimais on August 9 last year
to talk to Murphy about outstanding warrants. He
jumped
out a window and fled into the bush. Enzo and his handler were brought
in for what turned out
to
be an extensive search by a large number of police officers over several
hours. Constable Cording
lost
sight of Enzo in dense bush after releasing him on the fugitive's heels.
The dog's body was found
two
hours later submerged in a stream and wedged under a rock. Judge Harding
said Murphy's
explanation
that he punched the dog twice and it fell, dazed, was completely inconsistent
with
a
veterinary pathologist's findings that Enzo died from drowning. Murphy
and his partner called
"love
you" to each other as he was led from the crowded courtroom to the cells
after sentencing.
submitted
by Jim Cortina, Dir. CPWDA
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
EJAY
November
28, 2004 (Late entry)
Handler:
Lori Olson
Yolo
County Sheriff's Department
2500
E. Gibson Rd.
Woodland,
CA 95776
EJAY
The
bond between us was so special,
as
it is with most K9's and their partners.
He
would have died for me and
the
day he died, a part of me
died
too.
He
was a true and faithful friend
who
will always be in my heart.
Until
we meet again....."Mom"
|
K-9
Ejay was trained in apprehension and detention.
Lori
Olson
10133
Sheldon Rd
Elk
Grove, CA 95624
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
EMILY
April
1, 2006
Handler: Deputy
Al Nelson
Jefferson
County Sheriff's Dept.
200
Jefferson County Parkway
Golden,
CO 80401-2697 - 303-277-0211
Deputy
Al Nelson, longtime member of the Sheriff's Office K-9 Unit, recently notified
coworkers that K-9 Emily, a bloodhound who went on 134 missions on behalf
of law enforcement, was put to sleep on April 1 because she was suffering
from cancer. Deputy Nelson purchased Emily as a puppy in 1997. Emily worked
alongside Marky, another bloodhound, and the two dogs traveled in the back
of Deputy Nelson's patrol SUV whenever he worked. In the nine years of
Emily's time with the Sheriff's Office, her skills were called into service
for both criminal and non-criminal incidents for everything from
locating the bodies of homicide victims to finding lost children in the
woods. Emily was a multi-purpose dog, trained in tracking live people as
well as detecting human remains. Of the many cases that Deputy Nelson worked
with K-9 Emily, 38 were homicide cases and 10 were specifically for NecroSearch
International, a nonprofit organization that specializes in the search
for hidden gravesites. "At the latest count, there are at least 10 homicide
suspects serving time in prisons because of some of the work that Emily
did," Deputy Nelson said. In 2003, Emily helped investigators to find the
bodies of two slain women buried in a backyard in the Park Hill neighborhood
of Denver. The suspect, self-proclaimed serial killer Richard Paul White,
told Denver police that he had killed those two as well as several others.
"We got there, and she found them within seconds," Deputy Nelson said.
A dog's confirmation rate reflects the accuracy of its work. In Emily's
case, 94 of her 134 cases were "confirmed," meaning that she was a factor
in helping to solve those cases. Deputy Nelson's expertise, along with
Emily's reputation among the law enforcement community, meant that the
team was called upon many times by agencies throughout Colorado and the
West. The team also made frequent appearances over the years in the local
news, and was featured by the History Channel, the Discovery Channel and
National Geographic. In the Jefferson County community, Deputy Nelson and
Emily made regular appearances at schools and community events where children
and adults alike gravitated toward the duo. Deputy Nelson has worked with
bloodhounds in law enforcement since 1984 and continues to do so. Emily's
K-9 partner, Marky, still works alongside Deputy Nelson as he patrols the
south area of Jefferson County, and is called into service for any incidents
that require a bloodhound's skills. In 2005, Deputy Nelson bought
a bloodhound puppy named Georgia. Georgia has spent the last year in training
to develop the skills essential to any law enforcement bloodhound, and
to try to fill Emily's big paws. submitted
by lulu
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
EIKO
April
1, 2006
Handler:
Officer Chuck Gray
North
Andover Police Dept.
566
Main Street
North
Andover, MA 01845 - 978-683-3168
Police
dog dies of mouth infection contracted during river search - By Jim Patten
THE EAGLE-TRIBUNE NORTH ANDOVER, MA
Officer
Chuck Gray and his police dog Eiko were inseparable on the job and off
it. They had gone through a
grueling
14-week training course, which taught dog and handler how to work together.
They were working together the night of January 28 after an armed robbery
at the 7-Eleven on Winthrop Avenue in Lawrence, tracking a suspect along
the banks of the Shawsheen River, when Eiko, going through piles of debris,
suffered an injury that would end his life. Gray didn't notice anything
unusual at the time and Eiko kept on tracking, but a day later, Gray noticed
a trickle of blood coming from the 3-year-old shepherd's mouth, said police
Chief Richard M. Stanley. The following day, the blood was worse
and Gray took Eiko to the veterinarian immediately, Stanley said.
Eiko had suffered a bad cut to the inside of his mouth which was infected,
Stanley said. "They didn't know the cause. They felt the dog was
exposed to an electrical current or corrosive material," he said. "There
were multiple car batteries and buckets of chemicals and wires."
After oral surgery, which left stitches in his mouth, Eiko was eager to
get back to work. "He actually came back to work, but he started going
downhill physically. A couple of weeks ago he became very lethargic and
stopped eating,'' Stanley said. "For a dog who was extremely excited about
working, he was just lying in his pen at home and he could hardly walk."
Gray brought Eiko back to the veterinarian numerous times to try different
medications. "Ultimately, they couldn't do anything more for him,''
Stanley said. The normally exuberant canine died aptly in the patrol car
he loved getting into. Every time Gray would bring Eiko outside,
even when he was sick, he would see the cruiser and try to pull toward
it, hobbling up to it as if to say, 'Lets go to work,' until the last day
when he had to be carried to the car, Gray said. Saturday morning,
Gray placed the weakened Eiko in the back for the final trip to the vet.
Rather than carry the dog into the veterinarian's office, the doctor went
out to the dog. Gray crawled into the back of the cruiser with
Eiko and held him as the veterinarian, Dr. Kim Ackerman of Lynnfield Animal
Hospital, put Eiko to sleep. Eiko died in Gray's arms. "This has
been an exhaustive and emotional ordeal for Chuck, who has taken this position
as a K-9 officer seriously,'' Stanley said. "They depend on each other.''
He said the death of the dog left a void, not only for Gray, but for the
whole police force. "This was a good dog. It is a great loss for
the department,'' Stanley said. He said Eiko was the first police
dog to die in the line of duty in Massachusetts in 15 years. "I've been
a mess for two days,'' Gray said Monday, adding that a close bond is formed
during training. Eiko and Gray had worked together for about 10 months,
Stanley said. "You start from scratch and teach the dog everything
he knows,'' Gray said. "Then you bring him into the real world. He did
some other tracks even though he was hurt." Eiko was purchased
from Commonwealth Dog Training of Everett for $4,500, using drug forfeiture
money, Stanley said. He was trained for crowd control, building searches,
area searches, article searches and was really enthusiastic on what Gray
called "bite work," or criminal apprehension. The department has one other
dog, Iris, a black Labrador retriever whose partner is Officer William
Brush. submitted by Jim Cortina, Dir. CPWDA
|