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I have heroes who do what I can’t, but whom I can admire from afar.
Puyallup
WA – Police officers in Puyallup are mourning the loss of Dakota, a German shepherd in the city's K-9 Unit who was killed
Sunday night while chasing a burglary suspect. Dakota
was a hard-working, 8-year veteran with the Puyallup Police responsible for more than 200 arrests. Sunday
night, Dakota and his partner, Officer Don Bourbon, responded to a burglary call on the 29000-block of Webster Road in Pierce
County. Dakota
quickly caught the scent of the burglar who was making his way through a heavily wooded area. Because of the difficult terrain,
Officer Bourbon released Dakota. "By
the time they got to the road on the other side of the hedges, they heard the car and the sound and realized the animal had
been struck," said Bryan Jeter, Puyallup Police. Dakota
died at a nearby animal hospital. "Dakota
was with Don 12 hours a day everyday at work and then he lives with him and his family, so it's just like a member of the
family," said Robin James, Puyallup Police chief.
http://www.insidevc.com/vcs/national/article/0,1375,VCS_123_2007493,00.html
War dog makes it out of Iraq - Once-scruffy Fluffy overcomes red tape, finds home in U.S. By Lisa Hoffman, Scripps Howard News Service June 3, 2003 The Pentagon called it Operation Free Fluffy and, thanks to dogged determination by the Army and others, the decidedly unconventional rescue mission now ranks as another win in the war in Iraq. Fluffy, the once-malnourished commando canine who protected a U.S. Special Forces unit in northern Iraq, was reunited over the weekend with the Army handler who could not bear to leave the loyal dog behind in Iraq. "People pulled together for a dog who supported us the whole time we were in Iraq and put himself on the line for our country," said Sgt. 1st Class Russell Joyce, an Army Special Forces soldier and Fluffy's handler. Fluffy is now ensconced in Joyce's North Carolina home, where he is enjoying the best living ever in his estimated two years of life, including a new doghouse Joyce built -- decked out with a marble floor, courtesy of leftover construction materials -- and nutritious American dog food, a far cry from the scraps he had barely subsisted on. It was a torturous route -- complete with enemy firefights and pitched bureaucratic battles -- that brought the Iraq-born German shepherd there. Along the way, thousands of animal lovers from as far as Australia, as well as scores of Vietnam War veterans and an array of Capitol Hill lawmakers, peppered the Pentagon with calls and e-mails on the war dog's behalf. Even the White House, home to a pair of dog-fanciers, was kept apprised of the situation. The saga began when Joyce's unit in northern Iraq needed extra security for their efforts at toppling Saddam Hussein's regime. Trained to improvise on the battlefield, these elite troops asked local ethnic Kurds to find them a dog. The Kurds sold them Fluffy, who was badly underfed by the Iraqi army, missing several teeth and scarred on his head and legs. Joyce, 35, gave the good-natured dog his improbable name and took over his training and care. Fluffy protected the commando team while they slept and performed admirably as the soldiers fought for control of a mountain north of Mosul. Joyce said he and Fluffy survived several shooting incidents and a minefield. When it came time for Joyce to return home to his wife and two children in Fort Bragg, N.C., he scrambled for permission for Fluffy to accompany him. But although immunized and checked out by Army veterinarians, Fluffy was barred from going because he was not an official military working dog. From virtually the moment he returned home on May 11, Joyce fought to find a way for Fluffy to be sprung, fearing the dog might be euthanized or abandoned in a country not fond of canines. Joyce was not prepared for the response he would get as his e-mailed plea found its way to Web sites of military war dog veterans and advocates for animals. Within days, thousands of e-mails and calls -- many from Vietnam War vets who to this day grieve that they had to leave behind canine combat companions who saved countless GI lives -- bombarded the White House, the office of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and congressional lawmakers. The Army led the charge for Fluffy, coordinating the trek through the byzantine bureaucratic requirements of, among others, the Agriculture Department, U.S. Customs, the Air Force and Army. To conform to regulations, Fluffy was officially deemed an "honorary military working dog with honorary war dog status." With final approval from Rumsfeld's office, Fluffy was assigned a human major and sent on a three-day journey home via Air Force transport. The only hitch last week came when a firefight close to the U.S. airfield near the unsettled city of Kirkuk in northern Iraq delayed their takeoff for three hours. "Everyone has been super-supportive," Joyce said, recognizing "everyone at the Pentagon," the 506th Security Forces squadron in Kirkuk, Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., and the scores of Vietnam vets who rallied to Fluffy's aid. He said he hopes to use Fluffy's story and fame to drum up support in Congress for a resolution to establish a national monument in Washington to war dogs. -- Lisa Hoffman's e-mail address is HoffmanL@shns.com Copyright 2003, Ventura County Star. All Rights Reserved.I have learned of a hero that will forever stand in my heart as one who has attained the highest level respect and honor. That this hero served at the 9/11 WTC site and was later killed by his own in the line of duty breaks my heart. I never knew Git Ander and will not see him until we meet in the green fields where we all hope to go. Please honor his memory by visiting these websites and following your heart: http://www.ctlegalguide.com/SlideShow/caninetribute.htm and http://www.ctlegalguide.com/SlideShow/git.html
A former Seattle Police Officer, Lucy’s Pam does the driving and paperwork for this well respected team.
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