The use canines by law enforcement from the first use to where we are now in using canines on a daily basis is completely different and more common. The training is more intense now and every handler and canine must go through a two – eight-week school to get certified. Not only that but he handler and the canines must go back and re-certify every year to continue the use in the field. There are two breeds that stand out in the law enforcement community over the rest.
Research Questions
1. Why was the first canine used in law enforcement? Dogs have been used by law enforcement agencies for over 100 years. The English used bloodhounds while searching for Jack the Ripper in 1888. In 1899, in Ghent, …show more content…
When to use a canine and when not to? If you are deploying your canine for Narcotics Detection, you have to ask if it is on a car or in a house. What is the safest way to search without getting yourself hurt and the dog hurt? Remember these dogs cost a lot of money- anywhere between $12,000.00 - $18,000.00 depending on the training and what the dog will be certified in. Back to Narcotics detection, when I arrive on the scene I always tell the officers to get the occupants out of the vehicle and have all of the doors closed on the car. I get all of the occupants out for Officer safety and so that the officers can watch their body language as we conduct a “Free Air Sniff of the …show more content…
In order to get your dog, the best chance to track a suspect, get a piece of clothing or a scent straight from the car or house. Before you can start a track, you will want a perimeter set up to give you the best possible chance to apprehend the suspect. Once again, ask where the last place was someone saw the suspect and did anyone try to go after him before you arrived on scene. Tracking is one of the most difficult things to do in our jobs due to the amount of foot traffic on a daily basis in the areas where people run from the police. It is never going to be a perfect track or a perfect scenario.
Hypothesis and Null Hypothesis
1. The hypothesis states that historically the first canine was used for tracking people thus leading into how we train our canines today. The null hypothesis is that there is no correlation between the use of the first canine and how we train our canines today.
2. The hypothesis states that German Shepherds are the most commonly used canine in law enforcement. The null hypothesis is that there is no statistical difference between the number of German Shepherds used in law enforcement vs. other