| Schultz
Passes Away
AKRON
POLICE K-9 HISTORY
Police
dogs, K-9s, have a long history in the
Akron
Police Department. Thirty-three years
ago, in 1962, two Akron police officers
were sent
to a K-9 training program to learn to
be qualified dog handlers. They were
each to train a dog,
and then come back to Akron and train
other officers and dogs. This group
of officers would then form a K-9 unit
within the Akron
Police Department.
On February 11, 1963, a K-9 training program
was started in the Akron Police Department.
Five Akron officers, selected from a group
of volunteers, and five dogs entered the training
program which was conducted by the original
K9 officer.
The
officers and their dogs worked together to
develop mutual trust and affection in order
to become an effective team. Not only did
the dogs go through intensive training in
all of the duties required of them, each officer
went through the same grueling training to
become an accomplished handler.
ON DUTY
June 15, 1963, the Akron Police K-9 Unit went
on duty. What should have been an important
occasion in the history of the Akron Police
Department became, instead, one of the great
controversies, and proved that regardless
of good intentions, police actions are often
viewed with suspicion by the community.
Unfortunately, during the civil strife of
the 1950s and 60s, police in the deep South
had used police dogs to control crowds of
demonstrators. Actions by the police during
those times caused many people in Akron to
question the use of dogs here. The problem
was finally resolved when an order was issued
prohibiting the use of K-9s to control any
public gathering.
Once
on the street, Akron's dogs went about the
duties they were trained for. No longer did
a police officer need to go into a dark building
to search for burglars, a dog was sent in
to do the job. Dogs were also used to search
for missing children and for evidence, and
to protect their handlers in dangerous situations.
One downside of the program was that the dogs
were not social creatures. Their training
required them to be loyal to only one master
and to reject any overture of friendliness
from anyone else.
The K-9 Unit was
a viable part of the Akron Police Department
for almost seven years before being disbanded.
Many factors entered into the decision to
disband the unit, not the least of which was
money. The police department was in the middle
of a program to increase the strength of the
department by two hundred additional officers;
most of the original dogs were still active
but because of their age and physical condition,
would soon need to be replaced; most of the
original officers wanted to go on with their
careers in other assignments; and, the public
had still not completely accepted the K-9
Unit.
TODAY
Society has changed greatly since 1970 and,
with those changes, has come a whole different
criminal element. Compared to the crime problems
of the 1960's and 70's when many criminals
committed crimes as a way of making a living,
the 1990's breed of criminal is often driven
by a desire to steal enough to support a drug
habit. Added to the police problems inherent
in dealing with drug driven offenders, is
the additional problem of drug use by many
otherwise honest citizens.
Preying
on both classes of drug addicted people is
the third criminal type, the individual who
provides the drugs. Encouraged by the vast
amount of money that the drug business generates,
there is never a lack of people willing to
risk prison, or worse, to provide the drugs.
Because
there is no end to the inventive ways narcotics
are hidden and
transported, the police desperately needed
a reliable way to detect the illegal drugs
once they stopped a suspect vehicle searched
a house or building, stopped a suspected courier
or in many other circumstances found themselves
in a situation where illegal drugs were suspected.
The simple answer to the police problem was
the use of highly trained drug-detection dogs
and handlers qualified to use them.
The
Akron Police Department went back into the
K-9 business in December, 1991, when two police
officer handlers and their dogs were assigned
to the Narcotics Detail. Unlike the earlier
K-9 program, which had very little public
support, this new program has excellent public
support. The new unit has two primary duties,
both very important. The first duty of the
K-9 Unit is drug interdiction and the second
duty is working with the public to build their
support for law enforcement actions against
the drug problem. |