In Loving
Memory of
K9 YANIC
November 5, 2008
K-9 Yanic trains with Fleenor and Cpl.
Edward Evans.
HANDLER -
Cpl. Edward Evans
St. Mary's County Sheriff's Office
23150 Leonard Hall Drive
Leonardtown, MD
301-475-4200
WEBSITE -
http://www.firstsheriff.com/
St. Mary's County Sheriff's Office Mourn Fallen Officer -
K-9 Yanic
It is with a
heavy heart Sheriff Timothy Cameron announces the passing of K-9
Yanic, a Belgium Malinois. The K-9 was acquired by the St. Mary’s
County Sheriff’s Office in 2004 from the Gaffney Police Department
in South Carolina. Yanic served as a patrol and narcotics detection
dog. He was partner to Cpl. Edward Evans and Senior Dfc. Todd
Fleenor. Throughout his years of service,
Yanic and his partners participated in numerous K-9 tracks,
apprehensions, drug searches, demonstrations and community events.
Yanic and his partners are credited with several important
apprehensions to include: the apprehension of a subject on July 17,
2005 who assaulted two law enforcement officers in St. Mary’s
County, the track and apprehension of Paul Anthony Pitner who
escaped from the St. Mary’s County Detention Center on March 30,
2007, and, in January of this year, the apprehension of a man who
severely beat his girlfriend in their Lexington Park home.
In 2004 and 2005 Evans and Yanic
participated in the Annual Iron Dog Challenge which was sponsored by
the Pennsylvania Police Work Dog Association. The Iron Dog
Challenge is a three mile course where each K-9 team must negotiate
man-made and natural obstacles, demonstrate marksmanship, a K-9
carry and an officer rescue drag. The team must also demonstrate
various police K-9 specialties such as criminal apprehension,
narcotic detection, bomb detection, and/or a rescue find. Both years
Yanic and Evans placed in the competition.
Recently Yanic was diagnosed with cancer and on Nov.
6, Yanic had to be euthanized. Police K-9s serve the public and
don't ask for anything in return, putting their lives on the line
everyday, just as their two-legged partners do. The men and women
of the St. Mary’s County Sheriff’s Office salute K-9 Yanic and thank
him for his commitment to this agency and to the citizen’s of St.
Mary’s County.
submitted by Jim Cortina, Dir. CPWDA
*********** another article. *****************
LEONARDTOWN, Md. (Nov. 7, 2008) -- The St. Mary's
County Sheriff's Office announced today the loss of K-9 Yanic. Yanic was
diagnosed with cancer and euthanized on Thursday. K-9 Yanic, a Belgium Malinois
(pronounced Malinwa) was acquired by the St. Mary's County Sheriff's Office in
2004 from the Gaffney Police Department in South Carolina. K-9 Yanic served as a
patrol and narcotics detection dog. He was partner to Corporal Edward Evans and
Senior Deputy First Class Todd Fleenor.
Throughout his years of service, K-9 Yanic and his partners participated in
numerous K-9 tracks, apprehensions, drug searches, demonstrations and community
events. Yanic and his partners are credited with several important apprehensions
including: the apprehension of a subject on July 17, 2005 who assaulted two law
enforcement officers in St. Mary's County, the track and apprehension of Paul
Anthony Pitner who escaped from the St. Mary's County Detention Center on March
30, 2007, and the apprehension of a man who allegedly severely beat his
girlfriend in their Lexington Park home in January of this year. In 2004 and
2005 Cpl. Evans and K-9 Yanic participated and placed in the Annual Iron Dog
Challenge which was sponsored by the Pennsylvania Police Work Dog Association.
The Iron Dog Challenge is a three mile course where each K-9 team must negotiate
man-made and natural obstacles, demonstrate marksmanship, a K-9 carry and an
officer rescue drag. The K-9 team must also demonstrate various police K-9
specialties such as criminal apprehension, narcotic detection, bomb detection,
and/or a rescue find.
"The men and women of the St. Mary's County Sheriff's Office salute K-9 Yanic
and thank him for his commitment to this agency and to the citizen's of St.
Mary's County," was the closing statement in a press release announcing the
death of the animal.
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