Puppies pictures
Just because drugs are not found does not mean that they are not there. puppies pictures Dog houses designs. I have seen too many clever places to hide drugs for me to doubt my dog when she says that she has the odor of narcotics and I can't find any. I have heard of studies done where narcotics were hidden in a location and then removed. Dogs were then able to smell the odor of narcotics in that location for 48 to 72 hours after these drugs have been moved. puppies pictures English bull dogs. So do we consider an indication by a dog under these circumstances to be a negative indication. I don't think so. My answer to all K-9 handlers is to have the first page of their training manual and records contain this statement: "THE GOAL OF ALL NARCOTICS TRAINING IS TO ELIMINATE FALSE INDICATION. puppies pictures Dog behaviors. "When we stop and think about it, if a dog misses drugs and does not indicate, the drugs go on down the road. This certainly is not an ideal situation but at least we have not hurt anyone's civil right. But if a dog's training does not concentrate on false hits, and that dog does indicate where there is no order of narcotics. Then we are violating the rights of the citizens involved. So in reality the primary goal of all drug dog training must be to eliminate false hits, with the secondary goal being to find narcotics. If that simple principle is followed no drug dog handler is going to make a mistake. To topQUESTION:What is your position on using pseudo narcotics in training drug dogs?ANSWER:Pseudo narcotics are non-narcotic. They are not illegal to own. That is a primary fact that everyone in drug dog training needs to remember. With this in mind, there is only one place for the use of pseudo narcotics in dog training. That's during the initial few weeks of scent association where the dogs come into contact with the drugs on their toys or in a sand lot where they dig up toys with a small amount of pseudo sprinkled on the ground over the buried toy. Once this period is past and the dog is moved on to real drugs, pseudo should not be used again. If a K-9 officer uses pseudo throughout the dog's career, it is only a matter of time in court before he is going to be asked "Does your dog indicate on anything other than narcotics?" The answer to that question would be "YES. " If the next question was "Then when your dog indicated on the vehicle on the interstate, how did you know that the vehicle contained narcotics or a substance that smelled like narcotic?" That can be a difficult question to answer. Of course the answer could be "My dog only indicates on the odor of narcotics. There are other substances that have the same odor as the narcotics. These substances are used to train narcotic detection dogs. " The courts would then have to rule on the facts of the case and set a president for future narcotics dog training. There are other facts in this issue that I do not care to go into on a web site that is open to the public. Too many defense lawyers float the web and I can't see helping them anymore than I have to. To topQUESTION:What is your position on this puppy narcotics training program being promoted in Texas by the Texas Police Canine Association?ANSWER:There are two ways to look at this puppy training program. One from the dogs standpoint and the second from a legal standpoint. First I will explain what the program is (as I know it). There is a man in Texas (named Bill Grimmer - he is a Canadian citizen) that does contract work for the Tarrant County Police Academy. This is a state funded school that certified police officers.
Puppies pictures
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