Memorials to Fallen K-9s
 2007-S
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 STRYKER 
December 31, 2007
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Handler: Officer Kedrick Sadler
Oceanside Police Department
3855 Mission Avenue -  ph: 760.433.4900
Oceanside, CA 92054

Police today named the canine and suspect in Monday night's plunge from the Coronado Bridge that killed the dog and left the suspect in serious condition with a collapsed lung. The dog, a six-and-a-half year-old Belgium Malinois named Stryker, had been with the police department more than five years, the past year as a partner of Officer Kedrick Sadler. Funeral arrangements for the dog are pending, Oceanside police Lt. Fred Armijo said. The suspect, 27-year-old Cory Byron of Vista, is being treated at the UCSD Medical Center for a collapsed lung and will be charged with causing the dog's death, driving under the influence and evading police, a California Highway Patrol dispatcher said. Officer Sadler, who assisted in the pursuit, was not available for comment Tuesday. "K9s and their handlers have some pretty significant bonds due to the nature of their jobs," Armijo said. "He needs time to grieve."  The death occurred when Byron stopped his vehicle midspan on the Coronado Bridge after an extended police pursuit early Monday night. Stryker quickly bit the man's arm, wrestling him to the ground, the dispatcher said. Byron is alleged to have then thrust himself to an upright position with Stryker attached to his arm and flung himself and the dog off the bridge at about 7:25 p.m. Monday. San Diego Harbor police later picked up Byron and he was taken to UCSD Medical Center, authorities said. Stryker's body also later was found dead in the harbor. The pursuit began in Oceanside at 6:44 p.m after police suspected the driver was intoxicated and attempted to pull him over on College Boulevard, which caused him to flee. During the pursuit, Byron, driving a GMC pick-up truck, allegedly was involved in a minor hit-and-run crash near Highway 76, authorities said.Highway Patrol officers joined the pursuit southbound on Interstate 5 as the car approached the Coronado Bridge, Landeros said. "We're very sad we've lost an officer dog," Landeros said. "Officer dogs are officers just like any other."
update:
Suspect leapt from bridge with canine - By Steve Liewer - UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
Several people left flowers yesterday for 6½-year-old Stryker, the department's most experienced police dog, at a memorial for Oceanside officers who have died in the line of duty. He was in the prime of his career,” said Officer Greg Rainwater, a former handler. “It's a real tragedy.” Stryker, a Belgian Malinois, died on the job about 7:20 p.m. Monday. A drunken-driving suspect whom Stryker had knocked down on the San Diego-Coronado Bridge picked up the 75-pound dog and leapt over the concrete barricade into San Diego Bay.
Cory Byron, 27, of Vista somehow survived the 200-foot drop, but Stryker did not. Byron is hospitalized at the University of California San Diego Medical Center with a collapsed lung, a California Highway Patrol spokeswoman said. A Harbor Patrol boat fished both out of the chilly waters. Byron was arrested on suspicion of causing the death of a police dog, evading arrest and driving under the influence of alcohol, the spokeswoman said. Oceanside police said Officer Kedrick Sadler was patrolling with Stryker when he witnessed a traffic accident near Benet Road and state Route 76 about 6:30 p.m. Police say the driver headed south in his GMC pickup on Interstate 5, with Sadler, Carlsbad police and highway patrol officers in pursuit. Less than an hour later, the motorist exited I-5 at the bridge and got out of the the truck mid-span. Sadler released Stryker, who police say bit the man and pulled him to the ground. The motorist stood up, grabbed the dog and jumped over the concrete barrier into the bay, the CHP said. It was not clear if the dog had let go of the suspect. Stryker's death greatly upset Sadler, said Rainwater, who trained the dog for about six months when it joined the force in 2003. Officers spend about 10 hours per day working with their canine partners. “You spend more time with the dog than you do your family,” Rainwater said. “Every day you're with that dog, the bond gets stronger.”  update: Service 1/14/08 
The Oceanside Police department would like to thank everyone in support of Stryker; the Police K9 that was killed after a drunken man jumped off the Coronado Bridge and took Stryker with him. The police department has set up a memorial fund in memory of Stryker. If you wish to send donations you can simply send a check made payable to the City of Oceanside with "K9 Fund" referenced in the memo section. The donations can be brought to the Police Department or mailed to:
Oceanside Police Department
Attention: Lt. Fred Armijo
3855 Mission Avenue
Oceanside, CA 92054
A memorial service will be held for Stryker on Monday, January 14, 2008 at 11:30 a.m.
The ceremony is opened to the public

Video - http://video.nbcsandiego.com/player/?id=205052
Video - http://video.ap.org/v/Legacy.aspx?g=aaf8d8bd-d986-477c-9586-d0e78830e649&mk=en-ap&f=cadiu&fg=email

An emotional service was held Monday at Camp Pendleton, where SoCal police dogs and their handlers gathered to say goodbye to Stryker, an Oceanside police dog killed in the line of duty. Many of the people who turned out support the Oceanside Police Department, while others were simply animal lovers who came out to pay their respects. Stryker, a 6-year-old Belgian malinois, had been with the force for five years and had several different handlers. The last person he was paired with was Officer Kedrick Sadler. He said he lost a family member when Stryker died. "I'm still hurting inside," Sadler said. "But I plan on moving on, and I'm doing the best I can without Stryker." Stryker was killed on New Year's Eve in a fall from the Coronado Bridge following a police pursuit. The man accused of leading authorities on that chase, Cory Byron, 27, of Vista, jumped from the bridge, allegedly grabbing the dog as the K-9 attempted to take him down. Byron is charged with two felonies, reckless evading police officers and cruelty to animals, in connection with the death of Stryker. 
He also is charged with driving under the influence, according to prosecutors. Byron is being held on $1 million bail. Stryker died on impact, following the 200-foot fall. Byron survived, suffering a collapsed lung. Oceanside police have established a fund they said will be used to support the K-9 program, in Stryker's honor. Anyone wishing to contribute can simply send a check made payable to the City of Oceanside with "K-9 Fund" referenced in the memo section. The donations can also be brought to the police department. 
submitted by Renee' Konias & Jim Cortina



In Loving Memory of
K-9 SHAQ
December 20, 2007
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Handler:  Officer DaveScudder
Greensburg Police Department
107 S Broadway St
Greensburg, Indiana 47240
(812)663-3131

Like any partner, friend or companion, Scudder keeps his memory of Shaq close to his badge, and his heart.
When he was laid to rest, there was no 21 gun salute. There was no escorted funeral procession; no folded flags or medals of honor. It was a quiet graveside service in the country, with just family by his side. When he was laid to rest, there was no 21 gun salute. There was no escorted funeral procession; no folded flags or medals of honor. It wasn’t the usual send-off for a local officer of the law, but Shaq was not a typical officer. He was a retired K-9 unit but was as important as any human on the beat, according to his owner, partner and former handler Greensburg Police Officer Dave Scudder. “He was a big part of my life. My son is 11 and I’ve had Shaq for 10 years. He’s like one of my kids,” Scudder said. Shaq, a 12 year-old black Labrador retriever, was humanely euthanized last week after enduring two years of violent seizures and degrading health, Scudder said. He was the longest-serving K-9 in county history, according to Scudder, and sniffed out countless amounts of drugs and assisted in more than 100 arrests. The death of Shaq was not overlooked by the department either. Police Chief Bill Meyerrose noted the dog had done more than his share of work during his tenure. “He got a lot of drugs off the street. He was good at sniffing out the stuff and led us on many great, successful searches,” Meyerrose recalled. Shaq’s story is one many law officers might tell of their partners. Scudder and Shaq met up when they joined the Decatur County Sheriff’s Department in 1998. When Scudder joined the GPD, a few years later, Shaq came with him. They spent every shift together, sharing in the thrill of the job and watching out for each other’s safety. Unlike other partners, however, when the cruiser was parked for the day, the two went home together. It was there, the two worked together to become better at their jobs. “I’d stash drugs in the kitchen cupboards and watch him to see how he would react,” Scudder said. “He’d sniff out food and his mouth would water. When he found the drugs, he’d breathe in real deep. That’s how I learned to tell the difference.”  He was unique, Scudder said. Typically, police dogs are German shepherds. Shaq was chosen because the Labrador breeds have an extremely keen sense of smell. He was trained as an aggressive alert dog, which means he would scratch and sniff when he hit on an illegal substance. Scudder said Shaq was astute at sniffing out marijuana, meth, cocaine, hash and heroin. Scudder said Shaq had become so proficient at his job the K-9 search received a new moniker: A Shaq Attack. He said units all over the county, as well as the region, often sought the expertise of Shaq’s nose in drug searches.
“It was nothing for dispatch to wake me up at two in the morning to go to Dearborn or Franklin counties for a search,” Scudder said. Over time, Shaq wore down. As he got older, Scudder decided it was time to pull him off the streets. Shaq was retired from service in 2006 and, instead of being turned out to a shelter or rescue farm like many old police dogs; Scudder brought him home. The dog’s health deteriorated over the last year and, recently, Shaq was suffering from at least 12 seizures a day. Last week, Scudder stood in the vet’s office and heard the bad news. “The vet told me his health would never improve. It would continue to get worse and his quality of life would never be the same,” Scudder said. He and his wife were planning a weekend getaway in Tennessee . He said he was going to call it off but the doctor suggested he enjoy himself and try to forget. While Scudder was gone, he had the doctor euthanize Shaq to save the dog any more pain. When Scudder and his wife returned Monday, the absence was immediately apparent. “When I came home from the weekend, he didn’t greet me at the door. I just broke down. I’m not too proud to admit it. Imagine what it would be like to lose one of your kids. It just tears you up,” Scudder said. The Scudders console themselves with the fact Shaq served local law enforcement faithfully and valiantly during his time on the force. 
Thursday, Shaq was laid to rest on a quiet piece of land owned by Scudder’s parents. In the grave with his fallen partner, Scudder placed two police patches and dog tags with Shaq’s name and years of service. The badge Shaq worn around his neck, he kept as a keepsake. “Part of me went with him,” Scudder said. “I doubt there’ll ever be another one like him on the force.” submitted by Jim Cortina



In Loving Memory of
K-9 SEQUOIA
December  2007

Handler:  Officer George Potts
Sept. 29, 1995 - Dec.11, 2007
New London Police Department
5 Governor Winthrop Blvd
New London, CT 06320
(860) 447-5282

Sequoia Has Fallen, And No One Can Hear His Bark  12/22/07
A GIANT SEQUOIA FELL LAST WEEK. Sequoia was a 12-year-old German shepherd who held a full-time job for seven years. He was New London police Officer George Potts' family pet for nearly three years before he started earning his keep as a police canine. Sequoia retired in September 2004. Billy Nott was the department's canine training instructor. In fact, he owned Sequoia for a couple of weeks before he turned the puppy over to his good friend Potts. “He was a great dog,” said Nott, now an officer in Ledyard. “They made a lot of finds.” He called Sequoia a couch potato trained to sniff out bad guys and lost babies. “It wasn't easy,” Nott said. “Several times George threw the leash in the air and said 'I quit.' It was about getting George to be patient. Dogs learn by repetition. Of course they worked it all out.” Potts had Sequoia before he had a family, but surely his wife, Monica, and children Cole, Carley and Cayley will miss the dog just as much. Monica Potts bought “Dog Heaven,” a book that helps kids deal with the loss of a pet. George Potts said Sequoia suffered from degenerative myelopathy, a progressive neurological disease that often affects the spinal cord in German shepherds. It is marked by a general reduction in mobility starting in the rear of the dog. It is usually associated with dogs over 7 years old. “It started early in the summer,” Potts said. “Then it just kept getting progressively worse. His last week he couldn't get up, couldn't walk.” Potts said he wished for the dog to survive the holidays, for the sake of the children. But then, he said, perhaps this was best.  The kids' preoccupation with Christmas might help to soften the loss. “I'm sure it's hardest on me. I actually had him longer than my family,” he said. “He's the first dog I ever raised on my own.” I wrote about Sequoia in 2004 when he was relieved of duty. What follows is from that column, and offers a glimpse of what kind of dog Sequoia was, on the job and off. He was just a huge, easy-going puppy. ... He had never been on a leash and wasn't trained to obey commands such as “sit,” “stay” or “heel.” ... Sequoia took a lot of training, but he ended up being what Nott would call a diamond in the rough, Potts said. Sequoia remained a teddy bear of a puppy dog, but he learned to be a grizzly bear of a police dog. “It's funny,” Potts said. “Some of the guys who are petrified of him when he's in my car have to practically step over him to get in the house when they come by. He just lies there.” Potts recalled two incidents that properly described his late, great partner. 
In one, Potts and Sequoia were chasing a man who was known to be tough. ... “This guy was so tough that, one time, he got stabbed and drove himself to the hospital with the knife still in his back,” Potts said. “It was so deep the doctor had to sit on him to pull it out.” “One night Sequoia was chasing him. It was the first time he was out of my sight on a job,” Potts said. “When I came around the corner, the guy had Sequoia in a headlock and was punching him. “I tackled the guy and we fought, but it took six cops to get him in cuffs. Sequoia tore off all of the guy's clothes. When he had the guy's jeans in his mouth, they came off and Sequoia fell back like somebody let go of a rope in a tug-of-war. But he jumped right back into the fray. It was a tough fight, all elbows and knees, but Sequoia didn't bite one officer.”  Another time, Potts was called to help look for a missing child in Waterford. The family and police had searched all through the house and the neighborhood for the infant. “They emptied cabinets and everything. They were about to start checking the (nearby Niantic) river. Well, I told (Waterford police) I didn't want to offend them, but I wanted to check the house again. We were there less than 30 seconds, and Sequoia starts barking at the couch. I looked under it, and there's the little boy, sound asleep. ... To me, that was the most satisfying thing he ever did.”  Dog Heaven. It's not just for kids.  submitted by Jim Cortina, Dir. CPWDA



In Loving Memory of
K-9 SONY 
 1 Oct. 1997 ~ 19 Dec. 2007 
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Handler: "Marty " Officer J. H. Martinez
Chicago Police Department
3510 S. Michigan, 
Chicago, IL 60653 
Tel# 312-746-7180

Thank you so much for wanting to memorialize my Sony. He was a wonderful GSD. His devotion to duty and to his family was impeccable. I will miss him very much. Sony was a retired full service K-9 at the time of his death. He worked for the Chicago Police Department from 1999 to 2006. As far as a good story, why don't you use the one I sent you for your second book, it's a great story you published about Sony. It was funny, and dangerous at the same time.  thanks again.Marty
I have my hands full with Rocky, my wife calls him the energizer bunny. He is my new K-9 partner. Sony had been retired since 2006, I have had Rocky since then. Marty 

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Sony is on the left and Rocky, my present K9 is on the right.



In Loving Memory of
K-9 SAMMIE
January 1994 – September 7, 2007

Handler: Officer Kevin Wright # 511
 Markham Illinois Police Department
  16313 S. Kedzie Parkway - (708)331-2171 
 Markham, IL

STATS:
Sammie located a firearm used in an attempted murder. The firearm was thrown into a heavily overgrown  wooded area the day before. We were not working that day. The next day we conducted the search. After officers attempted to look for the weapon.   The weapon was in the field for over 18 hours before Sammie and I were called to search for it. Sammie located the weapon within 4 minutes of starting the search. USPCA award.  Countless weights of cocaine, cannabis. Which led to arrests and convictions
************
“Sammie and I met one day in September of 94. I was choosing a canine partner for our police department. Well I was chosen by Sammie. We met and played and really hit it off. We went through training and Sammie became a dual purpose dog, patrol and narcotics work. Sammie became a stellar police dog, catching many suspects and recovering a lot of narcotics. The real story of Sammie is how she could be a police dog and come home and just be a ‘FAMILY dog’ rolling around with children, never once showing any aggression to anyone in the family. Sammie provided many hours of companionship to us. Sammie retired and then just became a pet. She loved rolling in the snow and fighting the snow as it was shot out of the snow blower. In the warm months she enjoyed rolling in the grass under a hot sun. After that she would nestle in the house with the family, whether playing with the kids or with Jake and Timber. Many times I recall ‘breaking up’ the dogs as they got a little too rowdy. Sammie was remarkable, when we obtained Jake (see his memorial). Sammie seemed to know that he did not even know how to play. Sammie taught him and played tug -o- war many days in the yard with Jake. Jake and Sammie had a wonderful trusting bond. Jake trusted Sammie with everything. Sammie helped protect Jake from Timber. They got along, but Timber was always ready to take advantage.
Sammie got older and a couple of years ago she developed a tumor. The tumor was not a cancer, but the location was a risky operation for Sammie. Sammie continued with us without surgery. Eventually Sammie began to enjoy life less and less. Old age was catching up to my partner. Her determination and spirit were there it just got lost from the mind to the body. This summer the tumor grew very quickly and Sammie was getting to the point she could no longer walk or eat. She would walk and eat for me, but no one else.
In early September Sammie began to collapse under her own weight and was barely walking and eating. She collapsed in the hall and those brown eyes looked at me as to say ‘Why are you making me do this, I will do it for you, I hurt and I am tired.’ I knew I would have to let my friend go. It was one of the hardest things I have had to do. Sammie ran to the Rainbow Bridge being meet by Jake and Stormie (our cat). No longer in pain or in suffering she became the dog we want to remember. She passed from my (our) loving arms, to the arms of God. Sammie, Jake, Stormie till we all meet again. We love and miss you.
Kevin and Cheri”  submitted by   xxxxxxx



In Loving Memory of
K-9 SERGEANT
November 5, 2007

Handler: Richard Boyles
Greenville County and Greenville-
Spartanburg International Airport
Mississippi

A retired police dog died from smoke inhalation Monday afternoon during a house fire in Greer. Tyger River Fire Chief Jim Redd said firefighters were called to the scene of the blaze, 216 Milky Way Drive, at 12:14 p.m. and found a back family room and attic in flames. No one was home at the time other than the dog, a black Labrador retriever named Sergeant. Retired officer Richard Boyles, who lived at the home with his wife, Arlene, had left the house that morning to go shopping, Redd said. A mail carrier reported the fire. The house was a total loss, and firefighters found Sergeant lying inside by the home's front door. Boyles formerly worked as an officer with the city of Mauldin, Greenville County and Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport, Redd said. Sergeant, he said, was well-trained and could even let himself out of the house by opening and closing a sliding glass door. But that door was locked at the time of the fire because the owners were not home, Redd said. Greer city firefighters assisted in the fire response and investigation. The fire began in the family room, but a cause has not been determined.  submitted by Jim Cortina, Dir. CPWDA



In Loving Memory of
K-9 SAXON
September 5, 2007
 

Handler: Russell Cornelison
Fresno Police Department
2323 Mariposa Mall
Fresno, California 93721
(559)621-7000

HE IS YOUR DOG
"He is your friend, your partner, your defender, your dog. 
You are his life, his love, his leader. 
He will be yours, faithful and true to the last beat of his heart.
You owe it to him to be worthy of such devotion." 
~author unknown~
Beloved police dog Saxon, 9 1/2, dies at officer's home - Belgian Malinois awarded medal after he was shot in 2002 incident while on duty. Saxon the police dog -- who survived a shooting in 2002 -- died Wednesday morning in the home of his longtime handler. The retired K-9 dog, a 91/2-year-old Belgian Malinois, worked for the Fresno Police Department for about three years before he was shot in the line of duty. On Aug. 22, 2002, Saxon and three officers went to the home of John Albert Majchen after hearing reports that he was firing his gun and playing loud music. When officers arrived, Majchen ran from his house and then tried to run back inside, officers testified in court. K-9 officer Russell Cornelison released Saxon, who latched onto Majchen's right leg. Majchen allegedly fired two shots from a shotgun at officers and at Saxon. The blasts ripped through Saxon's chest and punctured one of his lungs and an ear. He suffered pellet wounds to two legs. Majchen died in police custody of Wegener's granulomatosis, an inflammation of arteries, at age 51 before standing trial. The Police Department awarded Cornelison its Medal of Merit with Valor for saving Saxon's life. He removed Saxon from Majchen's front porch and ensured that the dog received immediate medical aid. Saxon was also awarded a commendation medal by Police Chief Jerry Dyer at the department's 2002 awards ceremony. "Saxon's actions were directly responsible for saving the life of at least one officer," Dyer said at the event. Saxon went through extensive leg surgery, but he walked with a limp for the rest of his life, said Jeff Cardinale, spokesman for the Fresno Police Department. "It's uncertain if his death had anything to do with the injuries sustained in the shooting," Cardinale said. Saxon lived with Cornelison at his home until his death Wednesday. Cornelison declined to comment. The Police Department is planning funeral services for Saxon, but no arrangements have been finalize.
*********
update on K9 Unit
Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyer is proud to announce the latest additions to the Fresno Police Department, as two new K9 officers, Kubo and Elvis will be sworn into duty.  K9 Kubo is half Czechoslovakian Malinois, half German Shepherd. Kubo's handler is Geoff Tushnet.  K9 Elvis is a Malinois and his handler is Officer Jesus Cerda.  The swearing-in ceremony will take place Wednesday, April 4th, 2007 at 4:00 pm at the K9 Training Facility located at Dakota and Sierra Vista Avenues. A tribute to past and present K9 partners, a live demonstration, and interviews with the new K9 handlers will be available.  The swearing-in of Kubo and Elvis brings the Fresno Police Department's K9 Unit up to 14 dogs and handlers. 
Please contact Public Information Officer Jeff Cardinale at 621-2486 or 978-9687 (cell) for more information. 
submitted by Jim Cortina, Dir. CPWDA


In Loving Memory of
K-9 SAM
August 1, 2007

Handler: Officer Elizabeth McNeil
Decatur Police Department 
402 Lee Street NE
Decatur, AL 35601
(256) 341-4600 

Decatur’s first police dog buried with his badge at training center
Sam, the Decatur Police Department's first police dog, during a May 1996 training session. 
He was a police officer without a last name, but he left a lasting impression on those who work to rid Decatur of illegal drugs. Sam, the city’s first police dog, died Wednesday when veterinarian Dr. Michael Newman euthanized him. The lab/shepherd mix had suffered from hip dysplasia, a condition that forced his retirement in February 2001. By Wednesday, the 12-year-old dog was no longer able to stand or walk. “The most valuable role Sam provided at Decatur PD was he was somebody’s partner,” said Lt. Frank DeButy, who worked with Sam on drug investigations. “Second of all, he was an invaluable tool in locating controlled substances. He had an ability none of us had. And to top it off, he was a friend.” Sam started in the summer of 1996, working with officer Elizabeth McNeil. He marked her fourth attempt to train a police dog. The first three failed to display the work attitudes and drive needed to be successful drug sniffers. “He could find things we could never find,” DeButy said. “A lot of times, he found stuff we never would have guessed was there, like hidden compartments in cars.” One of the benefits of drug-sniffing dogs is when they sense illegal drugs, they go on alert. This gives officers probable cause to search a car or structure without a warrant. "He knew when to work and he was all business," DeButy said. "But when he wasn't working, he was your buddy, to everybody." McNeil cared for Sam at her home after his retirement. Decatur police now use Brew, a lab mix. About 10 officers attended a funeral for Sam on Thursday morning. The department dedicated a portion of the police training center at Flint as the official canine cemetery. They buried him with his badge — just like a human officer, DeButy said. ( EUTHANIZED / HIP DYSPLASIA )  submitted by Jim Cortina & Elizabeth McNeil


In Loving Memory of
K-9 STRYKER
July 30, 2007

Handler:  Alice Hanan
Maryland National Capital Park Police Department
Headquarters
6700 Riverdale Road, Riverdale, Maryland 20737
Information: 301-459-9091; TTY 301-459-3051
Non-Emergency: 301-459-9088
Emergency: 301-459-3232
www.hup.org

Today, July 30th, I had K9 Stryker (retired) euthanized. He was an incredible K9 partner and I am honored and thankful for our time together. He had the best life possible for a dog and I am pretty sure he knew that. Thanks to everyone who helped us along the way. Good dog Stryker, good dog. Alice Hanan, an officer with teh Maryland-National Capital Park Police, trains in the woods in Sandy Spring with her cadaver dog, Styker who smells a box containing a dead squirrel before moving on.
Canine Operations
The Park recently implemented a Canine (K-9) Patrol as a complement to the Patrol Services Unit. There are currently two Canine teams. Officer Bussey and Officer Gormley and their canine partners "Bolo" and "Smokey" endured a very intense training course and have been applying their skills to the benefit of the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission and the residents and citizens of Prince George's County. The canine teams are used to conduct searches for evidence, narcotics and people. When not engaged in canine operations the teams perform patrol duties.

UNCONDITIONAL LOVE
My dog's love is unconditional
his loyalty pure and true
As for what I've done
to deserve such a friend
Oh, Lord, I wish I knew
®John Lawson 1996 
Stryker's awards:
    * 1998 VFW Officer of the Year for Prince Georges and Montgomery Counties
    * 1999 Maryland National Capital Park Police K9 Officer of the Year
    * 2000 Maryland National Capital Park Police K9 Officer of the Year
    * 2001 Maryland National Capital Park Police K9 Officer of the Year
    * 2002 Maryland National Capital Park Police K9 Officer of the Year
    * 2001 Maryland Governor's Crime Prevention Award
    * 2002 Montgomery County Public Safety Community Service Award
     SUBMITTED BY ALICE
Update submitted by Jim Cortina
Montgomery Park Police Mourns Loss of Special Police Dog; Stryker Participated in 9-11 Recovery at Pentagon
One of the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission’s most beloved K9 workers died July 30 after a career marked by close to 900 crime-fighting and emergency rescue operations. Stryker, who served the M-NCPPC Park Police, Montgomery County Division, from 1997 until his retirement in 2004, had worked all over the mid-Atlantic, including the Pentagon following the 9-11 plane crash. There, Stryker, working with his handler, Park Police Officer Alice Hanan, made 108 finds in the disaster’s aftermath. “Stryker was an incredible K9 partner and I am honored and thankful for our time together,” Hanan said. “He had the best life possible for a dog and I am pretty sure he knew that. Thanks to everyone who helped us along the way.” Stryker, one of four former K9 members of the Park Police’s Montgomery County division, had been trained in obedience, agility, tracking, trailing, and search and rescue. His partnership with Hanan is considered one of the commission’s most effective. The dog participated in investigations leading to 113 narcotics arrests totaling $152,923 in value of drugs seized. He also was credited with helping find two missing persons and took part in more than 100 public demonstrations. From Vermont to South Carolina, Stryker assisted in several high-profile cases such as missing persons Michelle Dorr, Susan Stottmeister and Chandra Levy; the 9-11 attack on the Pentagon, a high-profile gas tanker accident on I-95 and the water taxi accident in Baltimore Harbor in 2004. In addition to being named the Park Police K9 team of the year four years in a row – from 1999 to 2002 – Stryker and Hanan received numerous other accolades and commendations. 


In Loving Memory of
K-9 SANTOS - WTC 
August 2006
   ----
Handler: John Vogler
Long Beach Police Department Headquarters
400 W. Broadway - Long Beach, CA 90802 
General Information 562-570-7260

 In August, retired K-9 Santo passed away.  He was one month short of his 15th birthday.  Santo was my 3rd and last K-9 partner.  I got him when he was eighteen months old, a German Shepherd imported from Czechoslovakia.  He passed his certifications and started working the streets in April of 1993.  Working the day shift, Santo spent a lot of time doing PR work for the Dept. and the K-9 unit.  He visited most of the D.A.R.E. classes throughout the city and enjoyed all the attention from the students. Santo retired, when I did, in December of 1998.  Although he would have liked to keep working, he soon adjusted to retirement. He crossed the U.S. twice with us in the motor home as well as other trips.  Greeting people on his walks around the campgrounds was a favorite of his.    John Vogler (retired)
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Although the detail has seen many positive outcomes since its inception, there has also been a down side.  The Long Beach K-9 detail has, in the past, lost dogs while working in the line of duty. Bondo, a shepherd, received a severe brain injury and was put to sleep after being struck with a pipe wrench by a felon.  Argo, a Rottweiler, fell to his death while chasing a suspect during a rooftop pursuit.  A third dog, Asko, was shot while disarming a violent woman, but survived and received the Police Department's Purple Heart Award. Most recently, in 2006, Ranger, while in pursuit of a suspect hiding underneath a front porch, was shot, was quickly transported to an emergency facility by Long Beach Air Division, but with every effort to save him, succumbed to his wounds and died.
**- seen in previous memorials.....
The Long Beach Police Academy provides a dedicated resting place for the K9's who have lost their lives in the line of duty, as well as for those whom have retired from duty and passed on.
submitted by Renee' Konias



In Loving Memory of
K-9 SPADE
January 11, 2007

Handler:  Diane Dosal
Gallup Police Department
451 State Road 564
Gallup, New Mexico 87301
Non-emergency: (505)863-9365
Gallup, New Mexico

$12 million cop dog will be remembered - Andrea Egger Staff Writer
A Gallup Police officer died in early January with little fanfare. Officer Spade, a German Malinois, was a certified police officer with his own badge. His handler, Cpl. D. Dosal, said Tuesday that Spade had to be put to sleep at Cedar Animal Hospital Jan. 11. Spade had a rectal tumor that began growing, although veterinarians at first told Dosal they didn't think it would grow. A week before she took the 7-year-old dog back to the vet, he stopped eating and wasn't listening to or obeying his commands. The vet told Dosal that he was going to suffer with the tumor and should be euthanized. "It was the hardest thing I ever had to go through in my career," Dosal said, adding it was more difficult than handling homicide cases, gruesome fatal crashes and other types of cases she's worked on. Although she didn't consider herself an animal person, Dosal said she still became attached to the large, intimidating dog during her three years working with him. "It really is true, they become your best friend," Dosal said. She felt that Spade's career should be highlighted. "A regular officer who served three years, he would be recognized," she said. "He (Spade) protected and served for three years." Dosal and Spade became local heroes more than a year ago when they uncovered 320 pounds of a mixture of methamphetamine and cocaine at the Port of Entry between Arizona and New Mexico. The duo were called to the port because a Department of Transportation officer needed someone to translate Spanish. Dosal spoke to the driver for a while and thought of asking him to let Spade search the semi, more as a training exercise for Spade than anything else. "He was just not making sense," and his logs didn't match his statements, she said of the driver. The man was very cooperative and agreed to have the dog walk around the truck. Spade indicated to Dosal that he sensed drugs in the passenger side, in the sleeper area of the truck. She told the Department of Transportation officer and the driver that the dog was alerted to something in that area. She and the Department of Transportation officer began searching the sleeper compartment. They took the bed apart and found a handmade wooden box placed inside the box spring. Inside the box were 20 bricks of a drug they thought was probably methamphetamine. The officers were excited — that was probably about $3 million in street value. But that wasn't all. Dosal and the other officer took the bricks out of the box and found 20 more bricks underneath with more bricks underneath those. "We just started taking them out," Dosal said. They learned later it was $12 million street value in a mixture of methamphetamines and cocaine. "It was a good hidden compartment. It looked like it was part of the bed," Dosal said. Spade came already trained from Germany and all of his commands were in German, she said. Dosal had to spend three 50-hour weeks training with Spade to learn the commands and to get Spade familiar with her. After they began working the streets together, she and Spade went on drug searches at the high school and on building searches for the police department. He was considered a multi-purpose dog, used for patrol and narcotics. "He was a talented dog. He could do anything," Dosal said. In most of their training, Spade was the largest dog and Dosal was the smallest officer. "He looked intimidating but he was probably the nicest dog you'd ever meet. He was calm," Dosal said. She said she met only one other female officer working as a canine handler during her various training sessions in the country. The other female officer worked at a department in Colorado. Dosal first became a canine officer after her brother, Gallup Police Sgt. Gabe Cebada, began running the program for the department. Cebada recently returned back to duty after his police dog, Bosco, attacked him while they trained July 1. Cebada had to have several surgeries to his hand and almost lost a finger. Bosco is now working with another department. Cebada is working with a new patrol dog named Rocky. Other Gallup Police canine officers include Cpl. Andy Yearley, who works with K-9 Officer Tater, and Officer Donald Howard and his patrol dog, Ufo. Each of the officers had to pay for their own dogs, although the department paid for the training. Dosal paid $3,500 for Spade. Sometimes people remark that it seems cruel to work the dogs, but Dosal has found that the canines get "upset and restless" if they aren't training or being worked constantly. While K-9 officer handlers get attached to the animals, they are trained to understand one of the sad purposes for the police dogs, that their main purpose is to take the bullet for their partner, if need be. "If it's a situation where it's you or your dog, you send in the dog," Dosal said. Police dogs are on diets and can't gain more than a set amount of weight. Because of all the training, they are usually very muscular dogs, as was Spade. A website for deceased police dogs on the internet provides cards with information about the dog, similar to cards distributed at funerals. The information Dosal provided about Spade will remain on their website for a long time. Dosal expressed appreciation for Cedar Animal clinic for their caring, especially Dr. Jessica Balok, who also became attached to Spade. Not even an hour after Spade died, the clinic sent Dosal flowers. "I'll never forget that," Dosal said. submitted by Lt. Gabe Cebada



In Loving Memory of
K-9 SIPO
July 9, 2007

Handler: Sgt. Jim Bauerly 
Woodbury County Sheriff's Office
407 7th St.
Sioux City, IA 51101 
Phone: 712-279-6010
Gregory T. Logan, Chief Deputy

Woodbury Co. Sheriff's K-9 dog Sipo dies 
A K-9 dog with the Woodbury County Sheriff's Office has died. Sipo, an eight-year-old German shephard, was handled by Sgt. Jim Bauerly before he died Monday. After being certified by the U.S. Police Canine Association, Sipo began serving the sheriff's office in August 2000. He was an award-winning K-9 for his work in locating missing suicidal persons and armed suspects, the sheriff's office reported Wednesday. "I've been partnered with three canines throughout my career," said Bauerly. "Sipo was by far the best of the three." The sheriff's office now has five canines. Sipo's death has been hard on Bauerly, because the dog saved his life in April 2003. "Had Sipo not located the suspect, who was armed...the outcome could have been a lot different," Bauerly said. submitted by Jim Cortina, Dir. CPWDA



In Loving Memory of
K-9 SAMMY
 June 11,2007

Handler: Officer Andrew Jeleniewski
Yorkville Police Department
804 Game Farm Rd. 
(630) 553-8541  Direct:  630-553-8502 - Fax:  630-553-1141
Yorkville, IL 60560
E-Mail: Molly Batterson, Executive Assistant -  mbatterson@yorkville.il.us
South Holland Police Dept. - Cook County Sheriff's Dept.

We recently lost a second K9. This one was a Black and Tan German Shepard by the name of “Sammy.” Sammy’s partner was Officer Andrew Jeleniewski. Officer Jeleniewski and K9 Sammy began there career together at the Cook County Sheriffs Department in 2001. They worked together there until 2002 where they then left and went to South Holland Police Department. They stayed there until 2004 before coming to the Yorkville Police Department. Sammy retired from duty in January of 2007. I will try to get some additional information about his career and accomplishments, if you would like. He had quite a span of different locations of employment so it will take me a bit to get it all. He was a great dog who was really mild mannered and loved playing with kids and cops. I have attached a picture of K9 Sammy and Officer Jeleniewski. Thank you much. You did a wonderful job with the memorial for our last dog, K9 Jumbo.
*****   submitted by:  Sergeant Dave Delaney & Molly Batterson Yorkville Police Department



In Loving Memory of
K-9 SCHULTZ
November 1, 2006

Handler:  Sgt. Dale Dorn
Akron Police Department
217 S. High St.
Akron, OH 44308
(330) 375-2552

Born: 10/05/95 Germany - Weight: 80 lb.. - color: Black & Tan - Began Service: Feb. 1997
Accomplishments: Responded to over 1700 K9 calls for service - Over 500 Arrests, 74 burglars, 42 robbers
Tracked 2 armed robbers to the back door of the house that they were hiding in. Forced 3 armed robbers to surrender to police after robbing a convenience store at gun point. K9 Shultz liked BAD GUYS. The classic looking Rin-Tin-Tin type, he responded to thousands of calls, nabbed 100 burglars, and 67 robbers in his nine years on the streets with Sgt. Dorn.  He was the model patrol dog, ready to take a bullet for his fellow officers.  He was adored by law abiding citizens, especially victims of crime and school children. "Dogs seem to be able to reason with people, we got into some really hairy situations." Shultz died only hours after Dorn learned the dog had contracted bone cancer. He had been retired for one year, living the life of luxury, he was 11.  His death was sudden and shocking. He wasn't sick, just slightly lethargic, and only for a day or two when Dorn took him to the vet. It was Friday. The results of blood work came back on Tuesday morning. Dorn was stunned and related the bad news to fellow Officer Chris Davis in canine training when he had a feeling he should head home. Dorn found the dog at the bottom of the basement steps where he loved to snooze. He was gone and still warm, the family are still grieving. A memorial was planned.   submitted by Jim Cortina



In Loving Memory of
K-9 STORM
June 25, 1996 ~ August 7, 2006 

Handler:  Officer Roger Wilsdorf
East Peoria Police Department
201 West  Washington St.
East Peoria, Illinois 60611 - (309)698-4700

He suffered from a cancerous infection of his bladder, prostate and euteras. His death is a great tradegy to me, and I can only hope to pass his memory along. He truley was a fantastic dog and I couldn't have asked for a better partner and friend. Storms birth name was "Oscar"  He was born in Holland June 25 1996. I picked him up from CTI (Canine Training Institute) in the middle of August 1997 at 14 months old. He was sworn in on 25 August 1997 and completed initial 10-week training November 14 1997. His last K-9 search/arrest was on August 5 2006 @ 21:30 hours. He died August 7, 2006@ 10 years 2 months old. He was in service and a high speed no drag hard charger for 9 years. It should be noted I did not keep track of narc weights and vehicle/cash seizures until 2001. 
************
Vehicle searches          827 
  (96% good indications where narcotics, para or residue found)
Interior narc search    158
Building search           98
Article search            21
Area search              67
Demo                     34
Track's                   57
Felony Apprehensions    196
 Total uses          1261

Seized: 326 Hitter pipes,
47 hitter boxes, 
147 other paraphernalia, 
48 Syringe's,
5 Meth lab's, 
4 firearms, 
60 Cannabis plants,
3 grams Herion, 
185.2 grams Cocaine,
621.2 grams Meth, 
5428.2 grams (12.25 pounds) Cannabis, 
17 vehicles
 $14,810.00 USC cash 
(not counting the $22,000.00 seized for outside agencies).

Our K-9 passed away last Monday.  We have already had the memorial service.Our K-9 was known as Storm and his handler, Officer Roger Wilsdorf.  They served the East Peoria Police Department as a team for nearly 10 years. Storm will be deeply missed by all, but especially by Officer Wilsdorf.  They were truely the best of friends. Storm became suddenly ill and passed away unexpectedly during surgery.  It was a shock to all of us, but especially devestating to Officer Wilsdorf. There are a million stories that could be told by all who have worked with the duo, but it is enough to say that the team will be missed beyond description.  They were the true personification of professionalism and excellence. Together, they lived and breathed the job. Together, they served the East Peoria Police Department, in East Peoria, Illinois. Thank you for your time.
submitted by: Dale Orr


In Loving Memory of
K-9 SZULTAN
November 23, 2006

Handler: Patrolman Ryan Ashbaugh
Sugarcreek Police Department
212 Fox St.
Franklin, PA  16323 - 814.437.3702

Residents and police officers in Sugarcreek are mourning the death of the tiny, Benago County borough's first K-9 dog. K9 Szultan served four years on the force.  He was struck by a vehicle on Thanksgiving morning. He and his handler, Patrolman Ryan Ashbaugh were off duty at the time. The accident happened on Georgetown Rd., Venango County. The dog had an unbelievable personality.  Szultan lived a life that was far from routine. He assisted human officers in dozens of drug raids, rescues, drug seizures, and building and school searches in the tricounty area. He became a valued partner to all the law enforcement personnel.  He was hit by a car and killed at 9:40 PM Thanksgiving night on Georgetown Rd. while off duty. He was honored at a memorial service at the Rocky Grove fire hall. More than 125 uniformed officers, emergency service personnel, friends and fellow K9 officers from up to 100 miles away turned out. Guarded by a uniformed officer, a silver urn, draped with a metal dog collar and Badge #5 were the only physical remains of a beloved officer and crime fighter. In April 2004, an out of state driver was pulled over for speeding, when Szultan was brought to the scene, he sniffed the vehicle and indicated that drugs were inside. Officers found $31,000 worth of heroin.  He is missed by all. submitted by Jim Cortina


In Loving Memory of
K-9 SASHA  SAR
Jan. 9, 1994 - Oct. 24, 2006

Handler: Donna Harrison
Meridian, MS 39307

 Almost 12 years ago a little German shepherd was born. At four months Sasha came to live with me when her original owner could not handle her. Slowly she came out of her shell and became an excellent SAR K9. By six months she passed her first level of certification. Through her lifetime, she made 3 finds and indicated direction that proved to be correct. Her most difficult trail was seven days old and she correctly indicated where the lady had fallen into the water.  Sasha's last search was a water recovery about 3 years ago. She alerted very precisely. She loved searches and would get extremely excited when my pager went off for a search. She seemed to know when it was a search and not just some other sort of page. Degenerative myelopathy took its toll on my old girl. For several months she had problems controlling her rear legs. Yesterday she was not only having trouble with her rear legs, but was limping badly in front too. She could not even maintain a sitting position. This morning I groomed her on e last time. We had some private time together and I sent her on a search without me for a while. "Go Find 'em!"  She will be sorely missed.... Good Girl  Free Dog!     submitted by Donna Harrison



In Loving Memory of
K-9 STRYKER
1995 - March 23, 2007

Handler: Chief Deputy Alan Kotschwar
Red Willow County Sheriff
105 West E
McCook, NE 69001
(308)345-1850    Fax:(308)345-1503 

Red Willow County's K-9 officer was a serious deputy and beloved pet during his 10-year career as the "long paw of the law" with the sheriff's department. "Stryker" died Friday, March 23, after a tumor on his back was diagnosed as cancerous by a McCook veterinarian. Chief Deputy Alan Kotschwar, who has been Stryker's primary handler for the past nine years, said the tumor grew from fist size to almost volleyball size in two weeks. "Dr. Wayne (Watkins) said the tumor was untreatable, and would only get worse," Kotschwar said Monday morning. Kotschwar's oldest son, 24-year-old Nathan, who is a veterinary medicine student at Kansas State University, helped his dad take Stryker to Watkins' Red Willow Animal Clinic Friday, and administered the shot that eased him to sleep. Stryker lived with deputy Donny Sailors' family the first year he worked with the sheriff's office, in 1997. When Sailors left the department, Stryker moved in with the Kotschwar family. "When Stryker was not working, he was our family pet," Alan Kotschwar said. "He was just one of the family." Alan and his wife, Jeannie, have two other sons, Adam and Brandon, who grew up with Stryker. Nathan and his wife, Jamie, have a three-year-old daughter, Sierra. "Stryker was good with the baby," Kotschwar said. "He loved kids." Stryker taught many school children about his job as tracker and drug dog, as he and Sailors and then Kotschwar presented programs at schools throughout Southwest Nebraska. Stryker also made many guest appearances at service organization meetings. Kotschwar said that Stryker's first major case came in late summer 1997, when he discovered $16,000 in drug money in the search of a vehicle whose driver had been arrested by the Nebraska State Patrol. Stryker tracked two teenage boys to their hiding place in trees east of Indianola after they abandoned a car they had stolen in eastern Iowa. Kotschwar said Stryker discovered drugs in the search of a car stopped by sheriff's officers near the North Highway 83 car wash. He also found drugs in a vehicle search for Hitchcock County sheriff's officers and tracked the driver of a car who fled from a motor vehicle accident in Frontier County. Stryker was involved in a number of searches for offenders who ran away from the Nebraska Department of Corrections Work Ethic Camp in McCook, one through cornfields northeast of McCook and another up and down creek banks southeast of the Southwest Junior-Senior High School. Stryker tracked an escapee from the Hitchcock County jail in Trenton, Kotschwar said. Stryker conducted or assisted in house searches for the McCook Police Department and for Furnas County. Stryker retired a year ago, Kotschwar said, suffering from hip displacia, a common ailment in German shepherds. Stryker's body was cremated. Sheriff Gene Mahon said that although no service is planned for the dog that was a vital part of his department, he will place a plaque at the sheriff's office recognizing Stryker's contributions to law enforcement throughout Southwest Nebraska. Mahon said, "He was definitely an asset in drug and search operations. He was valuable to our department, and to the area outside of Red Willow County." The sheriff said he isn't sure his department will get another K-9 officer, although, he added, "We desperately need one in this area." Stryker was purchased with donations from the community, and owned by the Red Willow County Sheriff's Posse. Sheriff Mahon said he will talk to his deputies to determine if anyone is willing to accept the responsibility of a dog. "It takes a lot of extra hours to do it right," Mahon said. "Stryker was a pleasure to have around," Mahon said.  "He's really going to be missed." 
submitted by Jim Cortina



In Loving Memory of
K-9 SONJA
& Cpl. Phillip Michael Deese
March 9, 2007

Dorchester Sheriff's Department
St. George address for Sheriff's Office
Detention Center and Civil Process
100 Sears Street
St. George, SC 29477  -  843-832-0300

Corporal Phillip Michael Deese, 38, was on patrol when an eastbound pickup truck crossed the median of I-26 near the Harleyville exit and slammed into his cruiser head on at 5:20 p.m. Deese and the driver of the pickup, 53-year-old Christopher Burnham Junior of Summerville, both died instantly. Deese's patrol dog, Sonja, was in the back of his cruiser and also died. The accident caused a chain reaction that involved three other vehicles in the wreck but no one in the other cars were seriously injured.  One, a 2006 Sebring, was driven by Desmona Brown, 27, of Johns Island, who was transported to Trident Regional Medical Center in North Charleston. The fourth vehicle was a 2003 silver Mutsibishi driven by Ashley Grimsburg, 20, of Rock Hill. She has two passengers with minor injures. The fifth vehicle was a 2005 Saturn, driven by a 23-year-old, who was not injured. Deese had been a Dorchester County deputy since May 2001 and was named Deputy of the Year by the South Carolina Sheriff's Association after he and a different police dog, K-9 "Bailey" were both shot during a domestic violence call on April 6, 2003. Deese stopped after he was flagged down by a woman, Ashley Phillips,35, of 105 Monarch Drive who said her husband, Timothy Matthew Phillips, 41, had a loaded shotgun. While he talked to her, her husband emerged from some bushes and started firing wounding Deputy Deese in the face, shoulder and chest but Deputy Deese was able to shoot back from his cruiser. Deese returned fire while he called for backup and an ambulance and reversed his car away from the shooter. Phillips continued shooting into the police vehicle as it backed away, hitting Deese's K-9 partner Bailey. Officer J. Dandridge arrived on the scene, helped Deese into the back of his patrol car and left the scene. He met the responding ambulance on Tupperway Drive and then transferred the deputy into the ambulance. Assessing wounds in the deputy's arm, face, shoulder and chest, EMS personnel asked Officer Dandridge to drive the ambulance so that they could begin to treat Deese. Deese had more than 100 pellets lodged in his arm and was looking at more surgery to remove them as they work their way out of his skin. Phillips was arrested at the scene as more than 20 units from various agencies arrived as backup. He was charged with criminal domestic violence, high and aggravated assault and battery with intent to kill, possession of a weapon in commission of a violent crime and malicious injury to a police dog. A jury found Phillips guilty of assault and battery with intent to kill, malicious injury to a police dog and the possession of a firearm during the commission of a violent crime. Phillips was sentenced to five years on the weapons charge, three years and a $2,000 fine for injuring the K-9 and 15 years for the assault on Deputy Deese, all to run concurrently. K-9 Bailey was retired and became a pet in the Deese household. Deese was both the recipient of a medal of valor and a deputy of the year honor. It is the first time in the history of the organization that one deputy received both honors. Corporal Deese served on the law enforcement agency's Special  Response Team and also the honor guard. At the request of the family, K-9 "Sonja" will be buried with Corporal Deese. Approximately 60 police K-9'S attended his funeral. He is survived by his wife Angela Jo, daughter Caley Lydia age 3, and two step-children, Brittani and Avery. A memorial fund has been established to help the Deese family and donations can be sent to Dorchester County Sheriff Office Memorial Fund, 212 Deming Way, Summerville, SC 29483. submitted by Jim Cortina

 
 
 
 

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