Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
A police dog, also known as a K-9 (portmanteau of canine), [1] is a dog that is trained to assist police and other law enforcement officers. Their duties may include searching for drugs and explosives , locating missing people , finding crime scene evidence, protecting officers and other people, and attacking suspects who flee from officers.
Police dogs are in widespread use across the United States. Police dogs are operated on the federal, state, county, and local levels and are used for a wide variety of duties, similar to those of other nations. Their duties generally include detecting illegal narcotics, explosives, and other weapons, search-and-rescue, and cadaver searches. [34]
K9 or K-9 most commonly refers to: K9, the nickname of police dogs and the police dog unit itself Canine or Canis , a genus including dogs, wolves, coyotes, and jackals
He is noted for being the only working dog fatality of the September 11 attacks. On 11 September 2001, Sirius and his handler Lieutenant David Waymond Lim were in a police office below the South Tower of the world trade center complex when upon feeling the shock of American Airlines Flight 11 crashing into the North Tower , he put Sirius in his ...
The U.S. Police Canine Association has been around since 1971, and in the past 20 years, there's been a marked improvement in performance by the dogs as police departments spend more for dogs bred ...
"K-9 History: The Dogs of War!" (not an official military site). Hahn Air Base, West Germany: 50th Air Police K-9 Section. "Military Working Dog Teams National Monument". Pitts, 2nd Lt. Mike (1966). "U.S. war dogs remembered". K-9 Heroes – Remembered. The United States War Dogs Association. Archived from the original on 2012-02-07
Kansas is poised to increase penalties for killing police dogs and horses after legislators gave their final approval Tuesday to a measure inspired by a suspect's strangling of a dog last year in ...
More than 5,000 people are demanding that a K9 police dog be allowed to retire with his longtime handler — part of a larger outrage over the animal’s temporary stay in a North Carolina shelter.