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K-9 Officers
Don't Dog It in Competition
Posted: Oct. 2, 2007
Fayetteville
Dozens of police dogs are chasing top honors not to
mention sniffing and biting their way to the top in an international
competition this week in Fayetteville.
The
International Police Work Dog Association 2007 Nationals attracted
police dogs from across the U.S., Bermuda, the United Kingdom and The
Netherlands.
"These dogs are critical because they can smell things we can't," said
Debbie Monde, of Connecticut Search and Rescue. "If we're looking for
someone who's been disappeared for two years, there's nothing left to
see visually. So, we depend on a canine's nose to help find the bones."
Monde brought her golden retriever, Hunter, to the competition and a
training seminar.
A
dog like this can cover 40 acres in under two hours, whereas you have a
line search of hundreds of people going through the woods. So, they save
resources, she said.
Arno Schuurmans, a dog trainer from the Four Winds Police Dog Center in
The Netherlands, was decked out in a K-9 bite suit for part of the
seminar.
We
train (officers) here put them in the suit and help them to train the
dogs, Schuurmans said. "I think (K-9 officers are) very important for
the police work all over the world."
The
Fayetteville Police Department has 12 dogs on duty, and they respond to
between 1,300 and 1,500 calls a year, Sgt. Tracy Campbell said.
"If
we find one lost child or an Alzheimer's patient or something, that dog
has paid for itself," Campbell said, noting the department's dogs have
sniffed out more than $10 million in drugs this year.
Law
enforcement agencies have been trying to make their dogs more visible in
public in recent years, he said.
After 9/11, there was a call that we need to be more vigilant and let
people see the dogs, he said.
Reporter:
Bryan Mims
Photographer:
Michael Joyner
Web Editor:
Matthew Burns
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