The 4th Ohio District court of Appeals upheld the dismissal of charges against a man who returned the barks of police dog Pepsie in Athens, Ohio, in September 2001.
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You have no choice. You draw your service weapon and fire three rounds into the dog. Two find their mark in its chest cavity, while the third rips through one of its front legs. It takes a few more paces, collapses, and dies.
Read More →A Tennessee police department is reacting to an officer's shooting of a family dog by training all officers in handling aggressive animals.
Read More →The memorial "Faithful Partner," recently unveiled at the University of California at Davis, honors the service and sacrifice of police dogs.
Read More →Kroger and Milk-Bone have teamed to sponsor the donation of dogs to five local law enforcement canine units.
Read More →A Philadelphia police dog died after being accidentally left inside a patrol car for more than four hours with the windows up on a hot day.
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Those last four words, "evaluate a suspicious package," always make those little cop hairs on the back of your neck stand straight out like the quills on a porcupine being chased by a hungry dog.
Read More →Federal agencies are having trouble finding enough trainable canines to meet the growing demand for bomb- and drug-sniffing dogs, so they're breeding their own.
Read More →Since 1990, police dogs trained to apprehend suspects in Prince George's County (Md.) have instead attacked and mauled police officers, canine handlers and other law enforcement agents at least 43 times, according to public records and other documents.
Read More →XM division is now producing NESTT (Non-hazardous Explosives for Security Training and Testing). Developed by LLNL, the NESTT is currently used by local, state, U.S. and foreign agencies as K-9 training aids for bomb recognition dogs. XM K-9 training aids are safe, convenient and easy-to-use alternatives for canine explosive-detection training.
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