Pubdate: Wed, 26 Sep 2007 Source: Forest City Summit (IA) Copyright: 2007 Mitchell County Press Contact: http://www.forestcitysummit.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4564 Author: Mary Loden, of the Summit Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?237 (Drug Dogs) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) DOG BUYS HIS OWN CAR Vehicle Gained From Forfeiture in Drug Bust by Canine Whoever said that crime doesn't pay hasn't talked to the officers from the Forest City Police Department. OK, it doesn't pay a lot, but the money taken in from drug bust forfeitures has helped the department buy necessary equipment and will definitely add a new car to the fleet. The timing couldn't have been better. Just when the police department needed to replace the 1999 Ford Expedition, used by officer Andrew Klein and his drug dog Ceaser, the department took possession of a 2006 Dodge Charger the dog caught in one of his drug busts. "Ceaser caught his own car and gets a new ride out of it," said Police Chief Dan Davis with a chuckle. While the car, obviously, can't be used by the police department, it can be traded in, along with the Expedition, for a new Ford Crown Victoria. There should even be enough money left over to have the car outfitted for Ceaser. Klein's vehicle is the oldest in the fleet and not even included in the regular rotation of vehicles, which Davis said are replaced every six years. When Ceaser was given to the Forest City Police Department in 2005 the Expedition was purchased used, from monies given to them from the Lillian Watson estate. Although the Expedition has served the department well Klein said, " it wasn't meant for law enforcement use. It was a regular car converted over." Police work is very hard on cars Klein explained. Ford Crown Victorias, standard police issue, are equipped with heavier transmissions, suspension and brake packages. Several suggestions were made at the last city council meeting when Davis told the council members the Expedition would need to be replaced. One suggestion was to give Klein one of the fleet's older vehicles but Davis said, "Preferably, I would like to order it new." Canine vehicles need specialized windows and doors along with special ventilation and air control devices. "Part of the cost is not just the equipment, but the installation," Davis said and he would like to see it done only once. The new car would be used by Klein for six or seven years, about the length of time Ceaser would serve the department. Davis said drug dogs are usually retired after nine or 10 years and they have already had theirs for over two years. The Drug Dog Ceaser, a 4-year-old German Shepherd, was given to the Forest City Police Department in March 2005 by the Regional Training Center. A Federal grant allowed the Center to give 10 trained drug dogs to agencies that had requested one. Five more dogs were given at a later date and one went to the Hancock County Sheriffs Department. "If we had to buy Ceaser it would have cost the department $12,500," Klein said. Then a vehicle needs to be equipped to hold the dog and a handler needs to be trained. "You could easily have $20,000 tied up in it." This is where the drug forfeiture money comes into play. "We can take back things bought with drug money, such as houses and vehicles," Klein said. "But you have to be able to prove it was acquired from a drug transaction." Items forfeited are later sold at police sales and auctions and the profit is divided between the agencies responsible for the drug bust. "You can't take someone's property for the sole purpose of making money," Klein stressed. But the money the department does receive from ill-gotten gains is put to good use. Klein explained, "We can't use it (the forfeiture money) for budgetary items, only for equipment we wouldn't normally be able to get - anything above and beyond." "Today's drug dealers are craftier, smarter," Klein said. "It is tough to stay ahead of them. He said the Forest City Police Department has used forfeiture money to purchase high tech equipment such as scopes, cameras, density meters and items needed specifically for Ceaser. Davis said forfeiture money can be used for any law enforcement purpose and a portion of the money they have received over the last few years went into the building of the new police garage. The Dodge Charger the department recently took title to was confiscated from a person delivering meth in Forest City. Ceaser found the meth hidden in the vehicle. "It was packaged and ready for sale," Klein said. Ceaser was called out quite often in 2006 Klein said but, "this year it's a little slower getting called out," he said and he attributes that to the number of dogs currently used in the local area. Ceaser's specialty is finding drugs being trafficked in vehicles along the highway and interstate corridors and he gets called on quite often by the Iowa State Patrol. Klein said law enforcement officers try to stop vehicles along these corridors before they reach Albert Lea or Mason City, bigger cities that eventually filter the drugs down to smaller communities like Forest City. Law officers have often been accused of profiling people as a reason for stopping a vehicle. Klein said the great thing about using Ceaser is, "a dog doesn't profile people. He's an independent source that says the drugs are there. That's what makes it so good." But not every drug bust is Ceasar's doing. Klein was quick to give praise where praise is due - to the other officers that make up the Forest City Police Force. Quite a few drug raids have been made without Klein's and Ceaser's help. And as far as finding drugs in vehicles, "if officers were not out there making the good stops, there wouldn't be anything for Ceaser and me to find," Klein said. "It gives us a lot of work to do, but our job is easy once the stop is made." Dual Purpose Dog Ceaser is high strung and likes to work Klein said, but he's very gentle. He often takes the dog into the schools and he loves being petted by the kids. "The worst thing we have to worry about is his stepping on people," Klein said. But when he is on duty watch out. Ceaser has also been trained to track down people. He will either bark at person when he finds them or he'll bite and hold and it all depends on the signal he receives from Klein. "He can read my body language, whether it is a matter of finding a lost child or someone fleeing from a crime scene," Klein said. The first case they ever worked on together was Evelyn Miller case in Floyd in 2005. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake