Pubdate: Thu, 12 Jun 2003 Source: Huntsville Times (AL) Copyright: 2003 The Huntsville Times Contact: http://www.htimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/730 Author: Wendy Reeves, Times Staff Writer CITY'S K-9 TEAMS PASS TESTS IN TRIALS 1 Local Unit Seeking Recertification; 2 in Chattanooga False For as long as the leaders in police dog training can remember, no one has ever tried to falsify a certification - until recently. Chattanooga police officials acknowledged last week they have removed two drug-sniffing dogs from street duty and reassigned their handlers to nonpatrol jobs because the dogs' certificates appeared to have been doctored. An investigation is under way. A check of the Huntsville police K-9 Unit shows six of its seven teams - - the dogs and their handlers - have passed all annual U.S. Police Canine Association certification requirements this year. The seventh K-9 team soon will test again for its certification. It's not unusual for a team to fail the certification test, USPCA Executive Director Russ Hess said in a telephone interview from the group's headquarters in Springboro, Ohio. The certification trials are not supposed to be easy, he said. "If there's a problem with a dog, it's better to find out this way so it can be corrected before the dog gets back on the street," Hess said. A local K-9 team found out how hard recertification can be: Huntsville police K-9 officer Tim Gann and his German shepherd partner, Dakota, took top honors in the annual certification and competition for Region 22 two years ago. This year, Dakota didn't certify the first time around. According to Huntsville police policy, Gann and Dakota are not allowed to patrol and answer calls together until they obtain regional certification. So they have been putting in extra training time preparing for another certification event. Gann said injuries have hampered Dakota in the agility phase of the testing. K-9 units participate in the regional events each year to keep the dogs and handlers certified. Several law enforcement agencies from Alabama, Tennessee and Georgia, including Huntsville and Chattanooga, comprise Region 22. Chattanooga police learned last week the USPCA did not have a record of two of the department's dogs receiving certification in narcotics detection. J.D. Toth, the USPCA's national secretary, verified that all Huntsville K-9 teams, except Gann and Dakota, have passed all the annual certifications this year. Huntsville K-9 officer Michael Posey, president of the USPCA's Region 22 and a certified trainer, said the annual certification is important to police departments because it's so tough to get. If a canine team is sued, Posey said, "the regional certification makes us court-defensible." Certification means the dogs and their handlers have been evaluated against standards tested and approved in court. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake