In
Loving Memory of
K-9
Xerxes
Febraury
3, 2007
Handler: Trooper
Ed Hunter
Vermont
State Police Headquarters
103
South Main Street
Waterbury,
VT 05671-2101
802-244-7345
Xerxes,
in this 1998 photo, has a firm hold of Castleton Police Officer Joe Arduca’s
arm as the dog’s handler, Vermont State Police Trooper Ed Hunter, puts
on a K-9 demonstration at Castleton State College. Xerxes dies Saturday
at the age of 12. A high-speed chase in Bethel had just concluded.
After ramming a sergeant's cruiser, the suspects fled into the woods. When
a call came in for a police dog, Vermont State Police Cpl. Ed Hunter said
he was on another case and would not be able to get there with his dog,
Xerxes, for a couple of hours. "They said 'No problem — we'll wait for
you,'" Hunter said. "They had that much confidence in that dog."
Xerxes, who found 170 people during his career as a police dog, died Saturday
at the age of 12. Named for the Persian emperor who led a massive invasion
of Greece, Xerxes came to Hunter from a pair of dog breeders who had a
falling out. He completed police dog training in November 1996, but his
first "track and find" came before his graduation. Hunter said the Brandon
Police Department needed a dog to track someone who had been ramming his
way into local businesses with a Ford Bronco and then robbing them. "We
tracked this guy into the swamp and caught him," Hunter said. "I spent
the night at the academy washing mud off the dog. … We knew he loved tracking
at that point." Robert Sterling, a game warden and dog handler for
the Vermont Department of Fish and Wildlife, said Xerxes quickly developed
a widespread reputation. "If a person could be found and you called Xerxes,
you could find him," Sterling said. As much as they wanted Xerxes on the
scene, Sterling said the dog was so fast that most officers didn't want
to be among those running to keep up with him. "One of the first tracks
I remember running with him, I'd be throwing off one layer or the other
just to keep up," he said. Xerxes also had a playful side. Hunter's scrapbook,
which contains training records and clippings of news stories involving
the dog, also has pictures of him with children. "You could take him, train
him, do an attack and two seconds later take out a tennis ball and play
with him," Sterling said. Hunter said he retired Xerxes last year because
he was starting to slow down in his old age, but the dog did not immediately
take to retirement. "He'd spin around in that kennel to the point where
he'd bite the end of his tail off," he said. "It was separation anxiety
from not being able to work." In addition to catching criminals,
Xerxes is credited with saving a number of lives, including a 70-year-old
man who got stuck in the mud while fishing, a 2-year-old found in a culvert
and a hiker who had a heart attack on the Long Trail. In his last year,
though, Hunter said Xerxes was content. "He'd lie on the deck," he
said. "He'd go wandering, but he'd have four spots he'd go to and I'd go
and walk him home. I never got mad at him because he earned it. That dog
made more arrests than a lot of our troopers did." Hunter and Sterling
said police dogs and their handlers frequently develop a very close bond.
"It's hard to explain, " Hunter said. "People love their pets, but most
people don't work with their dog 12, 15, 20 hours out of the day. We didn't
even go on vacation when we had him." Hunter said his late father
helped train Xerxes, and his sense of loss was compounded because he felt
the dog was their last connection. Sterling and Hunter said most
state police dog handlers pay for all the care and feeding of their animals,
but don't mind a bit. "The benefit of it all is, you find one person,"
Hunter said. "They might say thanks, they probably won't, but over the
course of years when you help the guys on the road, that's what counts."
In
Loving Memory of
K-9
XIRO
April 5, 1992 ~ April 10, 2006
photo
Handler: Deputy
Chief Timothy Sheehan
Tewksbury
Police Department
918
Main St.
Tewksbury,
MA 01876
(978)640-4381
Dates
of service are 08/20/93 - 06/07/2002
I
would like you to know that XIRO (ZIRO) was the first Tewksbury Police
K-9. He was well respected and highly decorated. XIRO and his
handler Tim Sheehan went anywhere anytime. It didn’t matter if a
community needed help twenty minutes away. If they got the call,
they answered it. XIRO made the news quit often, whether it was for
catching an armed suspect; sniffing out large amounts of narcotics or community
service, he and his partner Tim Sheehan were there to answer the call for
service. XIRO served the Town of Tewksbury Massachusetts and many other
surrounding cities and towns in the area for close to ten years.
He has done a great service to the town and made us all proud to call him
a brother officer. Deputy Sheehan has set the standard for K-9 handlers
and will always be regarded as one of the best.
Police
Dog Prayer
Oh
almighty God, who’s great power
and
eternal wisdom
embraces
the universe, watch over
my
handler while I sleep.
Protect
my handler from harm while
I
am unable to do so.
I
pray, help keep our streets and
homes
safe while my handler
and
I rest. I ask for your loving care
because
my handler's duty
is
dangerous. Grant my handler your
unending
strength and
courage
in our daily assignments,
dear
God, Protect my brave
handler,
grant your almighty
protection,
united my handler
safely
with the family after the tour
of
duty has ended.
I
ask nothing for myself. Amen
(Unknown)
|
submitted
by: Lieutenant Ryan M.
Columbus -Tewksbury Police Deparmtent - 978-851-7373 Ext 244
|