Country Life

The long paw of the law

When it comes to detective work, our police force owes as much to its canine constables and their handlers as it does to officers on the beat, discovers Tessa Waugh

- Photograph­s by Lucy Ford and John Millard

When it comes to detective work, our police force owes as much to its canine constables and their handlers as it does to officers on the beat, discovers Tessa Waugh

AT Etal Lane police station in Newcastle, three dogs are gambolling around their handler, PC Steve Henry. Police Dog (PD) Rudi, a Belgian malinois, is a three-year-old general-purpose dog—tasked with anything from tracking a suspect or stolen goods to grabbing hold of someone with a weapon; PD Jackson, a seven-year-old red cocker spaniel, is a specialist dog (known outside the police as ‘sniffer dogs’), trained to seek out explosives, drugs, firearms and cash; Gerti, a tiny, five-month-old black cocker, is being trained to take over from Jackson when he retires.

‘You can stroke him,’ reassures PC Henry, gesturing towards Rudi. I do so, but gingerly, as, although the malinois—which resembles a lighterfra­med version of the German shepherd—is prized for its trainabili­ty, it can look pretty menacing, too.

Dog handling is a popular career within the police and, as the number of positions has decreased recently, places are hard won. Each officer is tested for suitabilit­y (you need to be fit, co-ordinated and able to use your voice effectivel­y) and only then will they be given a young dog of about 18 months with which to embark on three months of training.

Each dog is carefully chosen to complement the officer’s size and temperamen­t and, having passed the training, officer and dog are licensed and allowed out onto the streets.

They quickly form a bond, helped by being rarely apart: the dogs travel in the van on every shift and go home with the officer after work. ‘It’s a big commitment,’ admits PC Henry, a handler for Northumbri­a Police for 14 years. ‘My wife will often say “Crikey, he’s always looking at his watch” because I always have to get back for the dogs.’

However, police dogs do fit into family life and quickly understand the concept of being on and off duty. ‘On rest days, we all go out for walks, although you have to go where there aren’t too many people around,’ explains PC Henry, who worked both at the Olympic and Commonweal­th Games with Jackson. ‘When I’m in uniform, we’re in the van, driving to the station or when the sirens are blaring, they know we’re working.’

His last general-purpose dog, PD Louis (another Belgian malinois), retired last year, after 11 years in the job, during which the dog ‘had my back’ many times, not least when they were sent to find a mentally disturbed woman who’d gone missing in the Derwent Valley. ‘We were searching near a bridge when he started barking,’ recalls PC Henry.

‘I rushed along the riverbank to find the lady still breathing, half in and out of the water. She was hypothermi­c and had terrible injuries from throwing herself from the bridge. I carried her back to the road, with Louis barking the entire time so that back-up would find us.’ Their actions saved the woman’s life, for which they were awarded the Police Dog Team Operationa­l Humanitari­an Action of the Year Award— presented nationally—in 2008.

Shifts are divided into three over a 24-hour period—days are usually quieter, providing an opportunit­y for training, but nights are full on. ‘People start drinking, taking drugs, stealing,’ elaborates PC Henry. ‘You wouldn’t believe what happens. I was quite naïve when I started and thought everyone would be in bed.’

‘When I’m in uniform or when the sirens are blaring, they know we’re working

He’s candid about the impact a dog can have: ‘They [the suspect] might want to fight every cop out there, but, when they see a seven-stone German Shepherd barking at them, it usually has the desired effect and they put their hands up.’ He recalls a man brandishin­g knives on the Tyne Bridge. ‘I challenged him first, but it had no effect, so I let Louis go. He knocked him onto his back, the man dropped the knives and we were able to get the handcuffs on.’

PC Stacy Beale of Hampshire and Thames Valley Police, who recently graduated with her latest generalpur­pose dog, Gem, a police-bred German shepherd, points out the need for care when instructin­g a dog to grab a suspect’s arm—they don’t do it gently. ‘Every time you use your dog, you have to justify yourself 100%,’ she cautions. ‘If you make the wrong decision, you’re the one who has to defend yourself in court.’

Her first dog, PD Ritzy, a German shepherd, was particular­ly adept at public order. ‘Once, Aldershot and Woking football supporters had a coming together after a match and we kept them apart for an hour before back-up arrived.’ Now retired, Ritzy lives with PC Beale, plus three Dobermans, PD Gem and a specialist dog called PD Grayson, a liver-and white sprocker that found £1,000 of crack cocaine in a bush in Basingstok­e last year.

Tenacity and determinat­ion are qualities that dogs and handlers possess in bucketload­s. Essex Police’s PC Sophie Chesters and PD Ivy were commended for pursuing a burglar for three-quarters of a mile across a river, before arresting the man, who’d taken refuge in a tree. ‘Ivy’s nose was the thing that got them,’ discloses PC Chesters, whose other dog, a springer, PD Mo, is a forensic-recovery dog detecting blood, bodies and the scent of death.

Sgt Duncan Sutherland of Scottish Police East Region reports: ‘Everywhere the Royal Family goes, I go. I was there before Zara Phillips’s wedding in Edinburgh and when there was a riot in George Street before the G8 summit, the dog section prevented carnage.’

Sgt Sutherland trains gundogs and judges working trials and says there’s little difference in the way gundogs and police dogs are trained. ‘It’s all reward based—if they do the right thing, they get a toy.’ At the station next to Fettes College, the officer displays the samples of Semtex, street drugs and cash they use for training. PC Max Hamilton is there with PD Chief, a large German Shepherd. ‘He’s not the sort you can pat,’ advises PC Hamilton, describing a recent incident in which Chief apprehende­d a burglar and his loot.

When you go to bed tonight, be thankful that PD Chief and his colleagues are out there, keeping villains at bay.

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 ??  ?? PC Henry with (from left) former-pd Rudi, PD Louis, PD Jackson and new recruit Gerti
PC Henry with (from left) former-pd Rudi, PD Louis, PD Jackson and new recruit Gerti
 ??  ?? Below: PD Gem shows her scary side. Right: Former-pd Rudi with PC Steve Henry
Below: PD Gem shows her scary side. Right: Former-pd Rudi with PC Steve Henry
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 ??  ?? Above: Working with officers, police dogs can help apprehend fleeing suspects quickly. Top right: PD Grayson, a ‘sniffer dog’, found £1,000 of crack cocaine in Basingstok­e last year. Right: Tools of the trade: the vest of handler PC Stacy Beale
Above: Working with officers, police dogs can help apprehend fleeing suspects quickly. Top right: PD Grayson, a ‘sniffer dog’, found £1,000 of crack cocaine in Basingstok­e last year. Right: Tools of the trade: the vest of handler PC Stacy Beale

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