Pubdate: Tue, 19 Feb 2002 Source: The Post and Courier (SC) Copyright: 2002 Evening Post Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.charleston.net/index.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/567 Author: Teresa Killian, Spartanburg Herald-Journal Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) POLICE DOG CASEY LOVES HIS JOB SPARTANBURG -- Valedictorians may envy the study habits of a Spartanburg graduate who recently moved to the head of his class. The top student never took a note, cracked a book or sacrificed spare time to cram for tests. In fact, 4-year-old Casey's handler, Spartanburg County Sheriff's Deputy Joel Raines, said the German Shepherd sleeps in his off-time and, quite frankly, is pretty laid back. But he's good. Just weeks after Casey snagged the "Top Dog in the Class" trophy from his 14-week school in Charlotte, he showed off his keen sense of smell and refreshed skills. He detected as little as an ounce of marijuana during a car search, Raines said. Then Monday, Casey deciphered the scent of drugs from hidden illegal substances packaged in pepper and aluminum foil to disguise the odor. In that case, investigators discovered 142 pounds of marijuana in fake box springs at an auto shop. But Casey hasn't complained about the workload. "Just sirens on the car get Casey excited. "He knows he's going to get to play," Raines said. Casey wasn't totally new to fighting crime, having had previous experience with a different handler at the office. But every time a dog gets a new handler, he goes back to school. Raines and Casey drove daily from the end of September to Jan. 11 for the 14-week class with the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Canine School. Casey's and Raines' training - along with three other handlers and dogs from the Carolinas - began with basic obedience to voice and hand commands. Sit. Stay. Casey then practiced more difficult skills. Climbing. Jumping. Walking on slick floors. Crawling through a pipe-like area. From there, the lessons moved on to marking a spot where he gets a whiff of an illegal substance such as marijuana. When he gets wind of something awry, he scratches and bites where the smell comes from. Then Raines, without Casey seeing, rewards him with a toy. Though Casey skipped the section on legal cases for dog searches, letting Raines take care of that, he still won the top prize, judged on such skills as obedience, agility, apprehension work, article searches and box searches. Though Casey already has plans to go back to school in a few months, Raines doesn't think it will take much to spark his hunger to learn. "I don't have to do a lot of encouraging," Raines said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl