San Francisco Chronicle

Drug dogs are still a cop’s best friend

- By Beth Winegarner

Legal marijuana is in the air across California, but local and state law enforcemen­t agencies say they won’t retire their pot-sniffing narcotics dogs anytime soon.

At first, it might seem like California’s legalizati­on of recreation­al pot would render canine units’ weed-sensitive noses obsolete. Indeed, some dogs are being pulled from routine patrols, and new ones are sometimes not trained on pot. But police agencies say their drug-trained dogs still have plenty of value, especially when it comes to taking down large-scale drug operations.

“While laws regarding marijuana have changed, certain activities are still considered crimes,” said Giselle Talkoff, spokeswoma­n for the San

Francisco Police Department. “Laws and regulation­s still govern sales, possession and transport, (and) there are times when the illegal possession of marijuana can coincide with other crimes.”

Most of California’s drugtraine­d police dogs go through an intensive training program where they learn to bark or sit when they smell heroin, cocaine, methamphet­amine or marijuana. The California Highway Patrol, which employs 42 drug-sniffing dogs, trains them for 440 hours before they go out into the field, according to CHP spokesman Mike Martis Jr.

When Colorado legalized recreation­al marijuana in 2012, police department­s there began talking about what to do with their narcotics canines. Some agencies were worried that the dogs would wind up calling unnecessar­y attention to legal weed, but Denver’s four police dogs have continued to be a key part of the force, said Denver Police Capt. James Henning.

Rather than retire expensive animals, “we decided to keep them — and it was a good thing, because the illegal marijuana trade is booming in Colorado,” Henning said. “Legalizati­on has almost made it more necessary to have good marijuana dogs, which is something nobody ever expected.”

The San Francisco and San Jose police department­s have no plans to retire or retrain their dogs. The Alameda County Sheriff ’s Office, which uses narcotics canines on patrol and at Oakland Internatio­nal Airport and lends pooches to Oakland on occasion, is also hanging onto its current contingent, said its spokesman and former dog trainer, Ray Kelly.

Those decisions could pose legal problems, both for police and for anyone these dogs call out, according to Lauren Mendelsohn, a criminal defense attorney who specialize­s in cannabis law.

“Drug dogs are trained to smell four different drugs. They’re not taught to differenti­ate between them,” Mendelsohn said. “Having a dog indicate they smell something gives an officer probable cause to obtain a warrant.”

However, Prop. 64, which made it legal for individual­s to use marijuana and grow it for personal use, specifical­ly states that legal amounts of marijuana and cannabis products don’t create the basis for a search, detention or arrest. A dog that alerts on marijuana could taint an otherwise lawful search that turns up illegal guns or other contraband. “There’s a strong argument that if one of these fourodor dogs smells something, it violates the statute,” she said. “It will be interestin­g to see how it plays out in court.”

The Law Enforcemen­t Action Partnershi­p, a national group of current and former police officers who support an end to the War on Drugs, agrees that the use of drugtraine­d dogs can create legal problems. Rusty White, a spokesman for the partnershi­p and a former canine trainer, said some police department­s cut corners by training their own dogs, and those dogs’ noses might not meet legal standards.

“If anyone is stopped, the first thing you ask is: Is the dog proven; is the handler proven in a court of law?” White said.

The U.S. Police Canine Associatio­n — a national organizati­on for police department­s that work with these dogs — isn’t offering guidance on what to do when states legalize pot. “It will be up to those agencies to develop a policy that’s best for their community,” said David Ferland, the associatio­n’s executive director.

Seattle Police Department spokesman Sean Whitcomb said it is possible to retrain drug-sensitive dogs to ignore marijuana. That’s what his agency did when Washington legalized pot in 2013. Officers have retrained the dogs by not rewarding them for finding pot. “Imagine you’re in an orchestra and you can play the violin, viola and cello. Now imagine you stop playing cello — you’re going to lose your skill,” Whitcomb said.

Most trainers agree that the dogs can be retrained, said Bill Lewis II, a spokesman for the California Narcotics Canine Associatio­n. However, many say it’s too expensive and time-consuming to bother, he said.

Local and state police agencies say they’ll work around the legal issues by leaving behind narcotics dogs when out on patrol. Instead, they’ll be brought out once a largescale grow or traffickin­g operation is suspected.

“Think of the dog as a specialize­d unit or investigat­or,” Talkoff said.

And, even though canines cost plenty to train, Kelly of the Alameda County Sheriff ’s office says they save about 1,000 officer hours each year searching for drugs, weapons and other contraband, and good ones wind up paying for themselves many times over, because of asset forfeiture in drug cases. One retired canine found $70 million in drugs, he said.

The use of these dogs is evolving as drug laws change, but the dogs are irreplacea­ble, Kelly said. “There’s no technology yet developed that can replace the nose and ability of a dog. The need for dogs is more and more every year, and the work they do is tremendous.”

 ?? Santiago Mejia / The Chronicle ?? Alameda County sheriff ’s Deputy Wesley Chea and his dog, Denny, search for drugs during K-9 training at Oakland Internatio­nal Airport. Even with pot legalizati­on, dogs like Denny are still on the job.
Santiago Mejia / The Chronicle Alameda County sheriff ’s Deputy Wesley Chea and his dog, Denny, search for drugs during K-9 training at Oakland Internatio­nal Airport. Even with pot legalizati­on, dogs like Denny are still on the job.
 ?? Photos by Santiago Mejia / The Chronicle ?? Denny, handled by Alameda County sheriff's Deputy Wesley Chea, goes through training at Oakland Internatio­nal Airport.
Photos by Santiago Mejia / The Chronicle Denny, handled by Alameda County sheriff's Deputy Wesley Chea, goes through training at Oakland Internatio­nal Airport.
 ??  ?? Grizzly looks up at Alameda County sheriff ’s Deputy Jeff Edwards during the Oakland airport training. Dogs trained to sniff out pot can be retrained to ignore it and focus on other drugs.
Grizzly looks up at Alameda County sheriff ’s Deputy Jeff Edwards during the Oakland airport training. Dogs trained to sniff out pot can be retrained to ignore it and focus on other drugs.

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