Las Vegas Review-Journal

Therapy dogs offer comfort in wake of Calif. shooting

- By Soumya Karlamangl­a Los Angeles Times

THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. — Outside the Borderline Bar and Grill in Thousand Oaks, a dozen wooden crosses adorned with flowers line the sidewalk, one for each of the people gunned down in a massacre in the city last week.

Mourners sit on the curb and gaze at photos of friends they lost, wiping away tears. But some who come to leave flowers or a note may feel a warm brush of fur on their legs, or even a lick.

Seven therapy dogs from Chicago have been in Thousand Oaks since last week to help those who are grieving. Three others arrived from New Jersey.

Richard Martin, director of the Chicago group K-9 Ministries, said one of his dogs was recently sent to help with the devastatin­g Camp Fire north of Sacramento.

The organizati­on, which started in August 2008, has trained 130 Labrador retrievers to do this work. Eightmonth-old puppies get a year and a half of training in “absolutely nothing,” Martin said.

The dogs are taught to be calm and present, but nothing more.

“Nobody likes to pet an anxious dog,” Martin said while gripping 7-year-old Ruthie’s leash. Ruthie, who wore a vest saying “Please Pet Me,” at one point slowly turned her head to look at a rustling leaf, but otherwise she stayed perfectly still.

On Monday morning, two girls sat cross-legged in front of the memorial for Justin Meek, a 23-year-old Borderline bouncer who died in the shooting. Bouquets of flowers sat in front of the cross, including one that had a cowboy boot as its vase.

As the girls began to tear up, a shaggy brown dog poked his head between the two, nuzzling up alongside them.

Later,awomanwhow­asatthebor­derline the night of the shooting and escaped through a window arrived at the makeshift memorial. She sat and petted one of the dogs for nearly two hours.

Those dogs were from Tri-state K-9, a group that flew to Thousand Oaks from New Jersey to provide comfort to people grieving. The Chicago dogs were leaving Tuesday, but the dogs from New Jersey will be in town through Thursday.

Martin said Ruthie’s first assignment was the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in Newtown, Connecticu­t, in 2012. The dogs also spent time with people who survived the Route 91 Harvest festival massacre and the Parkland, Florida, shooting.

The dogs work all day in tragic circumstan­ces such as these, but they rest in the evening.

“Their paycheck at the end of the day is a good massage,” provided by him, Martin said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States