Los Angeles Times

Baxter the dog is a soothing presence in O.C. courtroom German shepherd provides comfort to victims of child traffickin­g

- By Ben Brazil

years ago, Baxter the dog was found wandering the streets of San Bernardino wearing a yellow necktie.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear where he came from — or why he was wearing a tie.

Today, Baxter is the first and only service dog providing comfort to child traffickin­g victims in an Orange County courtroom.

The 10-year-old German shepherd works at the Lamoreaux Justice Center in Orange.

Baxter weighs 99 pounds and looks very much like a canine version of Thor. Traffickin­g victims can cuddle or pet Baxter while providing the judge an update on their recoveries.

“Some girls won’t talk unless he’s there,” said Cheryl Timmons, Baxter’s owner, who brings the pooch to court every Wednesday.

“Because of his size, the youth we have can just hug him, and he is just a big, comforting, warm presence that allows them to take down the barriers that might be up,” said Nicole Strattman, who supervises social workers in the Orange County unit that investigat­es commercial­ly sexually exploited children.

If the victims want Baxter there, then he is free to walk up to them. If any aren’t keen on his presence at the moment, he stays off to the side of the room.

“There was one girl who was so angry she couldn’t talk to anybody,” Timmons said. “Then she was just with Baxter and me and soon tears started to go down her face. She nuzzled up to him and talked to him. Only she and Baxter know what that conversati­on was about.

“These girls come from such dark places, it’s like having their own dog.”

Timmons, who lives in Yorba Linda, rescued Baxter when he was 4 years old from the German Shepherd Safe Haven, a nonprofit in Laguna Niguel.

She realized early that Baxter had a gift for providSix ing comfort. The courthouse put him to work in October.

“He’s such a gift from God for me,” Timmons said. “I had to share him.”

Baxter became Timmons’ first service dog. She took him to children’s hospitals and senior homes. He also works with the Anaheim Police Department’s K-9 unit.

Timmons has been working with Anaheim police for 20 years, since she founded the Friends of the Anaheim Police K-9 Assn. The group raises money to finance medical care for retired Anaheim police dogs.

Strattman said she contacted Anaheim police after coming up with the idea to bring a service dog into the GRACE court. The GRACE court, which stands for Generating Resources to Abolish Child Exploitati­on, was created a few years ago to provide support and service to victims and survivors who come through the foster care and probation systems.

Baxter is like a celebrity in the court. Everybody knows his name.

“Baxter runs this place,” Timmons said. “This place lights him up. It’s his happy place.”

 ?? Kevin Chang Daily Pilot ?? BAXTER, a 10-year-old service dog, poses with his owner, Cheryl Timmons, outside the Lamoreaux Justice Center in Orange. “Baxter runs this place,” she said.
Kevin Chang Daily Pilot BAXTER, a 10-year-old service dog, poses with his owner, Cheryl Timmons, outside the Lamoreaux Justice Center in Orange. “Baxter runs this place,” she said.

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