Pubdate: Tue, 7 Dec 2010 Source: Clarion-Ledger, The (Jackson, MS) Copyright: 2010 The Clarion-Ledger Contact: http://mapinc.org/url/cHy7vhe4 Website: http://www.clarionledger.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/805 Author: Therese Apel Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?237 (Drug Dogs) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture) JPD ADDS PAIR OF K9S TO FORCE Many veteran narcotics officers can tell you that people will hide drugs almost anywhere. The Jackson Police Department has two new tools to unearth the most well-hidden contraband. Their names are Alpha and Darius. The two K9s joined the force about three months ago, officials said, and have been on the streets in marked cruisers for about a week, said JPD Deputy Chief Brent Winstead. JPD had gone a few years without a K9 unit, and Chief Rebecca Coleman made the project a priority, he said. "When I came aboard, we had retired the last K9 dog, and we have had situations that have come up that would warrant the use of the K9, and we'd have to contact the Sheriff's Department or other law enforcement to use theirs," Coleman said. Of course, Darius and Alpha don't just police on their own. Darius, a 2-year-old black German shepherd, is accompanied by Detective Altrich Harvey and Alpha, a Belgian Malinois, rides with Detective Michael Mooney. The officers went through the three-week training with their dogs and continue to train a few hours each day. The officers and their four-legged partners are together around the clock. "He's another child," Mooney said. "He eats, sleeps, showers and works with me, literally. I know when he doesn't feel good, and he knows when I don't feel good." Harvey said sometimes just being away from him can stress Darius out. "He's a part of me," he said. "When I go away from him, he'll whine until he sees me again, and then he'll relax." But don't think these dogs are common house pets, the dogs will go after drugs hidden in the most obscure places, the officers said. "These guys (dealers) will do whatever they have to to keep from going to jail," Harvey said. The strangest bust was when Alpha indicated there were drugs on a baby, Mooney said. "Most uniformed officers won't look in a stinky diaper," he said. Harvey and Mooney were selected through a competitive process that included interviews with Winstead. The officers are on call at all times regardless of how many hours they may have worked. "If the phone rings, we've got to go," Harvey said. JPD officials said seized drug funds paid for the dogs and all their equipment, which includes bullet-resistant dog vests and cars that page the officers if there is a mechanical failure in the vehicles that would leave the dogs closed in a hot car for too long. Coleman said the investment is well worth it. "I think it should make everyone happy that we take the resources of these criminals and use it against them," Assistant Chief Lee Vance said. "It's a valuable way to turn the tables, so to speak." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake