Pubdate: Mon, 08 May 2006 Source: Wetaskiwin Times Advertiser (CN AB) Copyright: 2006 Wetaskiwin Times Advertiser Contact: http://www.wetaskiwintimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2179 CANINE PARTNERS FIGHT CRIME, TOO Wetaskiwin Times Advertiser -- Const. Robin Haney has his trusty canine partner Maddie when he's out searching for drugs. Cpl. Scott Chapman is teamed with Kazan during a search for a suspect in Hobbema. Such are the partnerships of an RCMP member and his four-legged partner in different facets of policing. In 1935, the RCMP purchased two dogs, Dale of Cawsalta and his son, Black Lux, for use in police work. Thus the RCMP dog section began and continues with Maddie and Kazan. Like many other dogs before him, Dale had actually helped his owner with police patrols for several years prior to this, but it was in 1935 that he and Black Lux became official members of the force. Two years later, in 1937, the RCMP established its first training program for dogs, near Calgary. Originally, dogs such as Dale were used for tracking people and for locating articles, including hidden stills and caches of illegal liquor. For the first several decades that dogs were members in the RCMP, a wide variety of breeds were used. Currently, however, the RCMP's dog training program is more structured. Dogs are carefully selected -- the RCMP likes perfectly healthy German and Belgian shepherds -- and the ones that are chosen undergo about 17 weeks of basic training. Today, individual police dogs are used for more specific tasks than they were in Dale's time. For example, Jack, one of the Force's newest police dogs, has been trained as a narcotics detector, not unlike what Maddie does working alongside Haney. During his eight weeks of training, he learned to locate six different major drugs. By 1999, the RCMP had 108 dogs working in various parts of the country, each with its own handler. The many operations these dogs are trained to participate in include searches for criminals and lost persons, security for VIPs, crowd control, hostage situations, avalanche search and rescue, and like Jack, locating illegal narcotics. Almost 70 years after Dale and Lux became the first official RCMP canine members, the RCMP's police dog service section has come a long way. While the dogs of today are no more intelligent or capable than those of Dale's time, their training has been improved and their numbers have been increased. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek