New York Daily News

DOGGED PURSUITS GIVE NYPD A BOOST

Cops’ K-9 partners, with their top-of-the-line sniffers, help locate electronic devices hidden by lawbreaker­s

- BY ROCCO PARASCANDO­LA

Anyone who’s ever misplaced a cell phone would probably be jealous of having dogs like Louis, Quaid, Hugh or Robbie, NYPD Labradors trained to find electronic devices hidden by criminals in laundry bags or secret compartmen­ts, tossed during a chase or disguised as key chains.

“You can’t beat the dog’s nose,” Officer Matthew Gullo told the Daily News. “Any electronic device that has storage capability they find because they all have the same chemical in common, and these dogs can detect that.”

The substance in question is actually two chemical compounds: triphenylp­hosphine oxide, a flame retardant used to protect memory chips, and hydroxycyc­lohexyl phenyl ketone, used as a coating against moisture.

Most electronic­s recovered during police investigat­ions are found by responding officers or those executing search warrants. But more and more, when investigat­ors want to make sure they haven’t missed anything, the K-9 unit for the

NYPD’s Critical Response Command will be called in.

“We’re like an insurance policy,” Sgt. Jaime Sitko said. “Just to make sure nothing was missed.”

Sitko and K-9 Quaid — at 2 years old, the youngest in the four-dog unit and, as one might expect, the one who barks most — were called into action a week ago when police busted a robbery ring whose members, using stolen mopeds and scooters, allegedly rode up on unsuspecti­ng pedestrian­s and snatched their cell phones.

Police found 22 phones in the Bronx apartment of the still-wanted ringleader, with Quaid tasked with looking for more devices.

The [human] cops hadn’t missed a thing, it turned out, but not finding a device is not a sign of failure, the K-9 officers said.

In fact, conducting searches that turn up no evidence is all in a day’s work, as The News witnessed during a training session at a police facility in Breezy Point, Queens.

Devices, including a tiny cell phone the size of a human thumb and a favorite among prisoners, were hidden in various locations — in a row of empty cans, in bags of luggage, between couch cushions, under exercise mats and in desk drawers.

Once the command is given, the dogs go to work, sometimes locating the devices within seconds, other times taking longer. K-9 Hugh, at 7 the oldest of the four, likes to take his time but always delivers, according to his handler, Officer Jeffery Wickham.

Once a scent is detected, the dog will sit on his hind legs. A treat follows, then the hound is instructed to point out the device a second time. Another treat follows, as does a thorough rub behind the ears.

The training doesn’t vary, even when the officers are off-duty and home with their four-legged partners. Kids get involved, hiding their phones, as do grandmothe­rs and others. And as when they’re on-duty, the dogs are fed piecemeal, one treat at a time, as opposed to a full bowl of food twice a day.

“My kid will have a baseball game and I’ll go to another field and hide something,” said Officer Andrew Nader, K-9 Robbie’s handler. “So we’re always training.”

A recent thumb drive find — courtesy of Robbie — is now evidence in an ongoing child pornograph­y case. Various other devices found by the four dogs have been used to strengthen numerous criminal cases.

So far, the dogs — each of which was previously in training to become guide dogs — have recovered more than 250 devices. That’s an average of about one a week in the nearly five years since the unit was formed in April 2019.

Louie, named after Detective Luis Lopez, who was killed in a 1994 buy-and-bust, and Hugh, named after Detective Dillon Hugh Stewart, shot dead chasing a suspect in Brooklyn in 2005, were the first dogs in the unit. Robbie, named after Officer Robert Helmke, who died in 2007 of 9/11 cancer, and Quaid, one of the few NYPD dogs not named after a fallen officer, joined the team two years ago.

Electronic­s-storage-device detection dogs, as they are formally known, were pioneered by the Connecticu­t State Police, which graduated its first class in 2016.

The first dog trained in that skill, K-9 Selma, died of illness two years ago.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? From l., Officer Matthew Gullo and K-9 Louis, Sgt Jaime Sitko and K-9 Quaid, Officer Andrew Nader and K-9 Robbie and Officer Jeffery Wickham and K-9 Hugh team up to find hidden devices (near l.). Far l. and below, at training facility.
From l., Officer Matthew Gullo and K-9 Louis, Sgt Jaime Sitko and K-9 Quaid, Officer Andrew Nader and K-9 Robbie and Officer Jeffery Wickham and K-9 Hugh team up to find hidden devices (near l.). Far l. and below, at training facility.
 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States