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In
Loving
Memory
of
K9
VICTOR
November
28, 2012
Handler:
Officer
Brian
Taylor
LeRoy
Police
Department
207
South
East
Street
LeRoy,
IL
61752
website
-
http://www.leroyilpolice.org/
LeRoy
police
dog
struck
by
vehicle,
killed
Victor,
the
LeRoy
police
dog, was
struck
by a
vehicle
and
killed
Wednesday
when he
ran into
the road
while
playing outside the farm where he lived with his partner, Officer
Brian
Taylor.
Victor, the
LeRoy police
dog, was
struck by a
vehicle and
killed last
Wednesday
when he ran
into the
road while
playing
outside the farm where he lived with his partner, Officer Brian Taylor.
Victor was
taken to the
Animal
Clinic in
Fairbury,
where he was
pronounced
dead, Police
Chief Gordon
Beck said.
The
9-year-old
dog was two
months away
from his scheduled retirement, he added. “Together K-9 Victor and Officer
Brian Taylor
have done an
outstanding
job for our city and the region at large,” Beck said in a commendation.
“Victor will
be missed.”
Victor
joined the
department in 2004 to begin the new canine program and went into service
April 4,
2005, after
training
with Taylor.
The
department’s
canine
program will
continue.
Officer Sean
Spencer will
begin
training in
February
with
a dog to be
purchased in
December.
Submitted
by Jim
Cortina,
Dir. CPWDA
In Loving Memory of
K9 VEGAS
December 13, 2012
Handler: Officer
Shawn Willey
Ellsworth Police
Department
Maine
Beloved police dog
dies in Ellsworth
Vegas, Ellsworth
Police Department's
award-winning
K9.
Ellsworth Police
Department’s beloved
canine, Vegas, died
Thursday, five months
after he was
sent off into retirement.
After serving seven
years on the police
force, Vegas lived out
his final days at the
home of Officer Shawn
Willey, who
had been the
German shepherd’s
handler since 2005.
Vegas retired due to
persistent back pain and
failing health.
“He was
just a great, great
asset to the
department,” said Police
Chief John DeLeo on
Friday morning. DeLeo
said
that aside from
having responded to 488
calls — including 117
criminal trackings, 13
missing people, 23
building
searches and
284 drug searches —
Vegas was also much
loved in the community.
See, for example, the
Ellsworth Police
Department’s Facebook
page, DeLeo said. News
of Vegas’ death was
shared
211 times,
“liked” nearly a
thousand times, and
received 252 comments of
condolences. “RIP big
boy. You earned
it,”
wrote one commenter. “So
sorry for your loss Sgt.
Willey,” wrote many
others. “When we posted
Vegas’
retirement, it
was probably the most
popular story we had
ever posted,” DeLeo
said. “This is even
bigger.
The response
from the community has
been huge.”Vegas was
replaced in July by
Chase,
a two-year-old Belgian
Malinois.
submitted by Jim
Cortina, Dir. CPWDA
Marlboro Police Lose a Loyal K-9 and
Friend
Vaik was handled and
owned by Officer Joe Chaplinski, who began
the K-9 program in 2002 with Officer Joe
Armineo.
Vaik, a German
Shepard, trained in narcotics and was
responsible for hundreds of service calls,
including one
during which he sniffed out 10
pounds of marijuana in the trunk of a car.
The Marlboro Police Department lost one of their
own early in September, when one of their first
K-9
dogs died after a battle with
Degenerative Myelopathy,
a nerve disorder that has caused him to lose
feeling first in his back legs and then
progressively up his body. Vaik was handled and
owned by
Officer Joe Chaplinski, who began the
K-9 program in 2002 with Officer Joe Armineo.
Vaik,
a German Shepard, trained in narcotics and
was responsible for hundreds of service calls,
including one
during which he sniffed out 10
pounds of marijuana in the trunk of a car. When Vaik was retired in 2010,
Chaplinski took
ownership of his partner and officially brought
him into his family, taking care of all
of the
dog's medical needs. In
an interview with Patch last year,
Chaplinski said taking on
Vaik's needs was never
a question. To Chaplinski, Vaik was an added
officer on the force.
"That’s my boy, he’s my
kid. The bond between a handler and a dog is
forever.”
submitted by Jim Cortina,
Dir. CPWDA
In
Loving Memory of
K9 VIPER
July 7, 2012
Handler: Dep. Jared Zeller
Brunswick County Sheriff's Office
Brunswick County, NC
Dep. Zeller remembers his K9 partner Viper
BRUNSWICK COUNTY, NC (WWAY) -- The Brunswick
County Sheriff's Office is grieving after
losing a
dedicated K-9 this weekend during a drug
investigation. According to the
Sheriff's Office
the Drug Enforcement Unit was investigating
in the Ash area around 7:30 p.m. Saturday
when K-9 Viper,
a Belgian Malinous, and his handler Dep. Jared Zeller were called out to
help search for a large amount of cocaine.
When they found the drugs, Viper bit through
the plastic wrap and the tape surrounding
the two-pound
package of cocaine, which led to a severe
reaction from ingesting it. Viper was taken
to to a veterinary
hospital in Southport, where he was pronounced dead. Zeller says he
and Viper were more than just partners.
"They come home with us," said Zeller. "They
interact with us. He was a member of my
family.
He says Viper's final act of service was a
testament to how much the canines do for the
community.
"They can find that lost child that's in the
woods that we couldn't find," said Zeller.
"They can smell the odor of narcotics inside
a car or inside a home."
He and Viper would train for six hours every
week to keep them as sharp as possible.
They were hardly ever separated during their
time together and he says things just won't
be the same.
"I think the hardest thing is going to be
when I go back to work, not putting him in
the car,
not having him ride around with me," said
Zeller. "It's going to be tough."
There will be a memorial service in Viper's
honor
Tuesday morning at 11 a.m.
at the Sheriff's Office in Bolivia.
|
submitted by Jim
Cortina, Dir. CPWDA
UPDATE:
Man Sentenced to 11 Years
in Drug Bust that Killed Police Dog
In Loving Memory
of
K9 VAGA-ELLA
June 12, 2012
Handler: Sgt. Michael
Craft
Town of Saugerties
4 High St.
Saugerties, NY 12477
K9 Vega-Ella, the Town of Saugerties Police dog,
was laid to rest Tuesday, June 12 in a private
ceremony.
She was 9 years old. The announcement of her
death on the Police Department’s website is
dated May 22.
Lt. Stephen Filak said 15 to 20 people attended
the funeral at the home of Sgt. Michael Craft,
her handler.
Vega-Ella was considered a member of the
department, Filak said.
“She did many of the tasks that a member of the
police department does. She protected her
handler,
detected drugs and helped with crowd control.” “That [nine years] is
about the end of a police dog’s working life,”
said Councilman Fred Costello. He described the ceremony as moving, and
said the dog “was a
dedicated member of the police department.”
Sgt. Michael Craft said Vega-Ella appeared to be
in good health up to her death.
However, she had a tumor on her spleen.
The dog was especially proficient at searching
for drugs and she was a good tracker.
She located several missing persons during her
career. “We would use her several times a week,”
Craft said. “We could open a door, and she would search the building for
us.”
When a police dog does track a suspect down,
there’s rarely an occasion for heroics,
as most suspects give up as soon as they see the dog, Craft said. He
recalled an incident
about two years ago in which police were seeking
a suspect, and neighbors pointed down the
street, saying he ran.
But when Ella was brought out, she headed right
under the deck. “He was hiding under a tarp, and
Ella went straight for him.”
Vega-Ella was Craft’s second dog. He has been
working with a police dog for the past 16 years,
and he hopes he can continue with a new dog.
Police Chief Joseph Sinagra said he would like
to get another dog and possibly expand the
canine program
to include a second dog. The community has already pledged to contribute
enough to buy the dog,
and a local veterinarian has promised free
health care, he said.
Craft agreed that the Saugerties Police
Benevolent Association and the Ulster County PBA
have both
contributed money for a new dog, and individuals in the community are also
contributing.
A well-bred “green” dog, that is, a dog with some basic training, but not
fully trained, costs about $6,500,
Craft said, “and I can do the rest of the
training, and I have the equipment that goes
with it.”
Craft has also offered to give up accumulated
overtime credits associated with
caring for a police dog in his home to make the
dog more affordable for the town.
submitted by Jim Cortina, Dir. CPWDA
In Loving Memory
of
K9 VERDE
January 23 2012
Handler: Officer
Mike Conti
Washington Twp. Police Dept.
The Washington Township Police Department is
located at
1 McClure Dr. Sewell, NJ 08080.
Please click
here for directions.
(working on this.... lulu)
I am said to inform everyone of the passing of retired K9 Verde.His handler, Mike
Conti, told me today
that he had to put Verde down this past Monday. Verde was
Mike's first K9 partner and worked the streets
with Mike Prior.
TO INFORM EVERYONE OF THE PASSING OF RETIRED K9 VERDE. HIS
HANDLER MIKE CONTI TOLD ME TODAY
THAT HE HAD TO PUT HIM DOWN THIS PAST
MONDAY. VERDE WAS MIKE'S FIRST K9 PARTNER AND WORKED THE
STREET WITH
MIKE PRIOR TO THE UNIT BEING DISBANDED SEVERAL YEARS AGO. VERDE WAS
RETIRED AND
LIVED A LONG LIFE PROTECTING MIKE AND HIS FAMILY. FROM WHAT
I RECALL AND THE STORIES I HEARD MIKE
AND VERDE WERE A BADASS TEAM.
PLEASE EXTEND YOUR RESPECTS TO MIKE IN THIS TOUGH TIME.
P.S. WHEN THE UNIT WAS DISBANDED YEARS AGO IT WAS MIKE THAT LOBBIED
AND GOT THE DOGS BACK ON
THE STREET, IT IS THANKS TO MIKE THAT GEORGE,
JASON, JEFF AND I ARE IN K9 TODAY, PLEASE
REACH OUT TO HIM AND LET HIM
KNOW YOU ARE THINKING OF HIM AND HIS FIRST PARTNER K9, VERDE
Kevin Convery Washington Twp. Police
Our sincerest condolences go out to Mike Conti, his family, and the
Washington Twp. Police Department
on the loss of retired K-9 VERDE.
The GCPK9A |