Dayton Daily News

Dogs, inmates make good pairs

Programs allow prisoners to care for, train canines.

- By Kate Santich Orlando Sentinel

— When Scott ORLANDO LeLand first encountere­d the dog that would change his life, she had been starved, abandoned and left to die at the end of a 14-foot logging chain.

“The shelter was going to euthanize her because nobody thought she was adoptable,” LeLand says. “We were her last chance.” Her name was Hope. LeLand, 54, is nearing the end of a 10 ½-year prison sentence for DU I manslaught­er. He lives in a converted motel in Kissimmee, Fla., called The Transition House, where felons with good behavior can go for community work-release programs, a step toward the freedom that lies shortly down the road.

When a dog-training program started in spring 20 14, LeLand was among the first to raise his hand.

Heather Szasz, the British-born founder of Think Alpha Dog, had just volunteere­d as a trainer for Osceola County Animal Services when one of the directors from The Transition House asked bout creating a program.

“I had never worked with guys who had been in prison before,” Szasz says. “But I loved the idea. I wanted to see if I could make a difference for the dogs and for the people.”

She called it TREATS Dog Rescue — for Training and Rescuing Eagerly Adoptable and Talented Shelter Dogs — and has donated all her time. She also created a Facebook page, in part to raise money for dog food and materials so there would be no taxpayer expense. These are, after all, dogs that likely would be put down if not for the program. Most had languished at the shelter for months, with no one interested in giving them a home.

The men understood the feeling. Some had spent as much as a decade in prison already — several, like LeLand, for killing someone while driving drunk. If they wanted to gain the privilege of training the dogs, they would have to care for the animals around the clock — feeding them, grooming them and cleaning up after them.

Szasz began with five inmates and two dogs, but the program quickly expanded. At last count, 20 inmates have studied under Szasz, and 38 dogs — which began as too shy, too aggressive or too unruly — have found permanent homes.

A dozen now live with the families of the inmates or staff.

“Working with the dogs has definitely taught me patience,” says Cody Bohl, now 24. He had been involved in an armed robbery at age 17, when he tagged along with a friend who had a gun. No one was hurt, but the weapon boosted his sentence substantia­lly.

Six months ago, Bohl’s parents came for a visit and ended up with Wiggles, a black-mouth cur.

“She was my favorite,” Bohl says. “The plan originally was for me to take her when I get out (in 14 months), but now my mom says I have to leave her because she’s best friends with their other dog, and my parents have fallen in love with her. It’s OK. I’ll just have to get another dog.”

It’s not just the dogs that benefit, though.

“These dogs have been disposed of, and a lot of these men know what that’s like,” said Steven Agelidis, clinical supervisor at The Transition House. “But through their bond, they’re able to work on that and realize there is unconditio­nal love. They learn to give it and receive it.”

For Gavin Forrest, 25, doing time for aggravated assault and grand theft, it happened with a dog named Phoenix, who was stung in the face by a bee.

“His whole face was swollen, and it looked pretty bad,” Forrest said. “I don’t cry over much, but it actually made me start crying. I never felt so much love for an animal until I saw the way he looked at me.”

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 ?? CHANDLER DOYLE / ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? Profession­al dog trainer Heather Szasz runs TREATS Dog Rescue, which uses inmates at a Kissimmee transition house to train shelter dogs from Osceola County Animal Services.
CHANDLER DOYLE / ORLANDO SENTINEL Profession­al dog trainer Heather Szasz runs TREATS Dog Rescue, which uses inmates at a Kissimmee transition house to train shelter dogs from Osceola County Animal Services.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Country renegade Willie Nelson, 82, will present a sold-out concert at Fraze Pavilion on Tuesday.
CONTRIBUTE­D Country renegade Willie Nelson, 82, will present a sold-out concert at Fraze Pavilion on Tuesday.

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