Pubdate: Wed, 02 May 2007 Source: Dominion Post, The (New Zealand) Copyright: 2007 The Dominion Post Contact: http://www.dompost.co.nz Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2550 Author: Britton Broun DRUG DOG RESCUED FROM DEATH ROW Three years ago, Roxy was on death row in a Rotorua pound. And though she still spends a lot of time behind bars, her future is looking bright. One of eight prison drug dogs nationwide, the labrador-staffordshire cross and her handler Marc Kilmister spend their days in jails between New Plymouth and Wellington searching for drugs coming in, and hunting out secret stashes inside. With an estimated 84 per cent of prisoners having had some form of drug addiction, it is an uphill battle. "We can't stop everything, we can't be here seven days a week, 24 hours a day, but we do stop a lot. Roxy was one day away from getting the needle in Rotorua and now she's on a real winner," Mr Kilmister said. Police-trained, Roxy searches cells and prison buildings - uncovering hiding places missed by the guards - as well as visitors, their cars, and staff, on a random basis. Mr Kilmister said even Roxy's presence acted as a deterrent - he had seen visitors' cars approaching the prison gates turn around after spotting her. On top of the more traditional transport via a visitor, drugs had arrived in dead birds thrown over the perimeter fence, pasted into magazines, or hidden in kettles or inside the soles of shoes for prisoners. With improvements to the visitor system, perimeter fence and the introduction of the drug dogs about eight years ago, drug use at Wanganui's Kaitoke Prison had dropped from about 30 per cent to 10 per cent. And correcting a common myth, Mr Kilmister said the drug dogs did not end up being junkies. "We make sure they don't get to the drugs. We use rags with traces of drugs for training and for a reward Roxy gets to play. We have a tug-of-war with a dirty old tea towel." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek