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by duke1965 on 09 November 2019 - 14:11
by Hukka on 09 November 2019 - 14:11
by duke1965 on 09 November 2019 - 14:11

by emoryg on 09 November 2019 - 14:11
Duke, I would like to reference this dog and having his registered name in the credits would be helpful, but not necessary.
by Hukka on 09 November 2019 - 14:11
duke, the only interest I had in the dog was to try to find the name for emory
by duke1965 on 09 November 2019 - 15:11
by Hukka on 09 November 2019 - 15:11

by emoryg on 10 November 2019 - 08:11
Hukka, I will call the vet office this week in case they have his birthday on record. As I mentioned, it would be nice to reference the entire dog’s name. There is a growing trend where law enforcement agencies are starting to flinch about police dogs tasked with criminal apprehension. His information could be included on a proposal package that may help maintain or even start new K-9 programs. Thanks again! BTW I would faint if I found out that Avar was a littermate to Arne Eqidius.
Duke, the handler may not be interested in a pedigree (why would he?), but my crystal ball tells me in the not so distant future, agencies will not only be more interested in the pedigree, but also the genetic makeup of the police dog.
I did manage to find a letter on the call I referenced where Avar played janitor's dog at the school.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/8w6ktfllo71526e/Avar42IP.tiff?dl=0
by duke1965 on 10 November 2019 - 10:11
emoryg, they should but I doubt it , I did korung today with my male, who is old (czecho)slovak linnes, and there were many modern sportline dogs there and I noticed many differences in behaviour, made me think about a thing or two in reference to breeding and what LE and society wants to see today

by emoryg on 10 November 2019 - 14:11
There are already million(s) dollar law suits that are starting to work their way through the courts. Many, many more than this involve six figures. Some agencies are trying to settle early, even for enormous sums that were all but unheard of ten years ago. Once additional case law begins to set a precedent, it may be open season on every agency who has a police dog tasked with criminal apprehension.
Some of the more interested topics being addressed include discernment (lack of), predator, breeds designed to injure or maim, DNA related eye glazing (this has been around a few years), vicious, uncontrollable, choke outs, and loose cannons. My own thoughts are that it will take 2-5 years to have a strangle hold on the LEO community, though I heard a rumor that some PSA type commercials are in the works. Instead of seeing commercials from attorneys asking if you have been injured at work, or hit by a drunk driver, it will ask have you been a victim of a police dog bite.
All agencies in the States want a dog who will be a valuable asset to their department, not a financial or public relations nightmare. What they don’t want or need is a dog who is a menace to society. They don’t want a police dog who gets away from the handler or escapes his containment, and runs down anything moving like a child on roller skates, mom pushing a stroller, dad cutting grass or grandma rocking on the porch. They don’t want a dog who takes four minutes to be asphyxiated and lose consciousness so he can be pulled off a suspect who is already face down and handcuffed throughout the ordeal.
BTW a new word for the hacks who started infiltrating the police dog industry ten years ago and created this disaster……subrogation. If they don’t know what that means, they soon will.
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