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by Ironside on 10 January 2010 - 18:01
Martin grimes explains that his two dogs Eddie and Keela...one only reacts to human blood and the other reacts only to human cadaver. They are two of the highest trained dogs in England.
Many find the reaction of the parents odd, rather than asking when your child is missing how cadaver came to be in your car the parents can explain it by the dogs being 'Unreliable'.
A Cadaver dog would be of no use if it was distracted by a dirty nappy and spilt fish oil.
by jayne241 on 10 January 2010 - 20:01
I totally agree. I didn't mean it as "Gee, I wonder if they will be distracted, why don't you try them and see?" I know the dogs are trained on different things, even to be able to distinguish between human remains and animal remains; certainly to distinguish between human remains and poopy.
I meant it as evidence, proof.
The parents (and the defense, presumably) are saying the dogs are unreliable. The trainer, the police, the prosecuting attorney, etc., say the dogs are reliable. Voila, demonstrate it.
Demos are conducted all the time. It should be easy enough to set up a demo for the particular excuses that either of the two cases is presenting.
by Ironside on 11 January 2010 - 07:01
by Nancy on 12 January 2010 - 02:01
But a lot of that simply depends on consistent documented training to prove the reliablity and false alert rates of the team in question and, of course, those rates should be calculated for problems blind to the handler and known distractors in the mix.
The proposed basic standards which I believe are international in flavor are on swgdog.org and this site also has the formulas used to calculate reliablity and false alert rate. Nothing radical there, pretty much a consensus of existing standards that have been in use for years. For something like this, I would want to know the thresholds the dogs could detect - one is expected to document quantity[grams up], age and type of source in their training logs.
Nobody can comment on a specific case if they dont know the details and if they do, they should not be commenting on a public forum because these kind of things can mess up court cases.
Demos, certification tests, training records.... a question I would have in England is the use of pig instead of human remains for training. My understanding was that training on actual human material was not allowed over there. Scent is similar but not the same and in the states pig is used as a distractor because there are wild pigs in the woods, pig farms, etc.. But it is not likely there were pigs in those places
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I must say though that my dog does not hit on me, my clothes, etc when I work with my training materials. This woman would have a real problem with bloodborne pathogens if she is careless enough to be transferring cadaver material to her clothing and her childs toys.. But I can also say I have seen towels saturated with blood then washed in oxi clean and bleached alerted on by cadaver dogs. But not stuff that had not had actual contact.
by Ironside on 12 January 2010 - 07:01

by shrabe on 12 January 2010 - 17:01
So I guess what I am saying is, without drawing any conclusions, is that there is more to the story than is being told. Especially if both dogs are hitting in the same areas consistantly. Other avenues should be explored.
by Ironside on 15 January 2010 - 14:01
by Ironside on 15 January 2010 - 17:01
The case as I have mentioned is now a 'Cold case'...The events took place 3 years ago..the dog found blood in the apartment and the parents said they think their child may have had a nose bleed.
If for example the dogs went back now to the same apartment after 3 years would they still be able to pick up cadaver?
The problem is Shrabe the lack of damn forensic ,without that there was nothing to take the case further.
Dogs cannot talk but they also do not lie.

by shrabe on 15 January 2010 - 18:01
Ironside,
I am glad you came back to this topic, I find it fascinating, and I love to speak to others who are passionate about cadaver detection dogs and what they bring to the table.
As for pseudo scents, the people I train with question the ability to actually recreate the scent of a decomposing body. There are studies being done right now with regard to the chemical composition that makes up the cadaver scent. I apologize as I don't have the study in front of me, but I believe there are over 400 chemicals that have been identified thus far by this researcher that a dog can detect. I would be hard pressed to believe that those chemicals could be recreated accurately! I do realize that some states will not allow actual remains to be used, I am fortunate that in my home state the use of human remains is allowed as it is not illegal to possess human remains, it is illegal to conceal a corpse, and in my opinion the use of actual decomposing tissue is the best way to accurately train a cadaver dog. There are also studies being done in Germany with regard 2scent andthe accuracy of the dogs. They are using carpet swatches that have sat next to, but not touching cadaver. One swatch was 2 minutes and the other for 10 mins. They kept the samples for a number of years, I believe 3, after that time they tested the cadaver dogs reliability in detection of cadaver scent.
ull of porous entities, any of which could attract and hold scent. I also work with a woman whose dog was used for finding trace evidence, ie strands of hair, drops of blood, and this dogs work has been confirmed by forensics, and state crime labs. It is quite possible that the child had a nosebleed at some point, and the dog is detecting that. Cadaver is vastly different though, as it is decomposing tissue, so would have a vastly different odor.
I hope the discussion keeps going, as I would love to see more people get involved in this discipline, I think there is a huge need for it, and I hope that one day soon, cadaver dogs will get the same recognition as drug dogs do!
Traci
by Ironside on 15 January 2010 - 19:01
The trunk of the car and side of the drivers door plus key fob... the parents hired this car three weeks after they claim she was abducted.
I have also seen footage of the dog reacting to the car...there were 10 cars and the dog only reacted to the parents rental car.
I for obvious reasons cannot say too much on an open blog but yes you are right there is a lot more to this case.
The srangest part of all ,are the parents and the way they speak. I will give you an example...The father 'the dogs are incredibly unreliable'....The mother 'there is no evidence that our daughter has come to any harm or that we were involved in her disappearance'...
I have seen those dogs at work and when they react to a hot spot it is the most amazing sight.
Please keep posting as I am eager to learn everything about their work.
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