Training police pups is tough, rewarding and sometimes heartbreaking work - Action News
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Manitoba

Training police pups is tough, rewarding and sometimes heartbreaking work

The charming image of a napping police pup, flopped on a desk between a keyboard and printer, has melted hearts online, including that of an officer who knows what it's like to love and lose a canine partner.

'I think it's more special than any other work-partner relationship,' trainer says

RCMP dog Jix takes a break between training sessions. (RCMP/Twitter)

The image of a napping police pup, flopped on a deskbetween a keyboard and a printer, has melted hearts online, including that of an officer who knows what it's like to love and lose a canine partner.

The photo of six-month-old Jix, an RCMPGerman shepherd, was posted on Twitter earlier this week and has been retweeted2,000 times and liked more than 6,000 times.

RCMP Sgt. KentMacInnislikes to imagine what lies ahead forthat snoozing ball of fur.

"What are you going to be, little girl?" he said. "The world is her oyster at this point. You see the promise and potential, like we do in our own children.

"We're there to hopefully have our children meet and exceed their potential, and we think the same way of our police dogs when we raise them."

RCMP Sgt. Kent MacInnis raised and trained Eddie, who is now 4 years old. (RCMP)

Almost midway through her training in the Selkirk, Man., area, Jix is being groomed as a full-fledged service dog. But before she tracks her first bad guy,or sniffs out explosives,or finds a lost child, Jix needs her nap time.

Training is tough work, said MacInnis, an expert handler with the forcewho is helping Jix to meet her potential. He works with Const. Jesse Neudorf, an apprentice dog handler whose dutyis to showJix the ropes.

MacInnis knows the joy a canine partner can bring and has also experienced the heartache.

His first canine partner, Rev, was killed in 2013 whenMacInnis'sRCMPtruck wasbroadsidedon a highway by a driver who ran a stop sign outside of Saskatoon. They were on the way home from a canine SWAT course in Edmonton.

You need to mentally prepare for those situations that may occur, where you may have to send your dog to sacrifice your dog in order for the greater good of the public.- RCMPSgt. KentMacInnis

"I don't know if you ever really get over it. You learn to live with it. That's all you can do to move on," said MacInnis, who brokehis back in five places and his pelvis in three places in the collision.

Another dog, Eddie, who is 4 now, was in the vehicle as well but was not critically hurt.He had just started his training to take over fromRev, whowas close to retirement.

"It's quite difficult to go through those kind of losses, but loss is a part of life," MacInnis said.

Deep attachment

On paper, MacInnisand Eddie might be partners, but their bond goesfar beyond that.

"We spend a tremendous amount of time together. I think it's more special than any other work-partner relationship that anyone can ever imagine," he said. "My partner is man's best friend."

He's almost like a family memberfor MacInnis.

During Thursday's cellphone interview, MacInnis was out for an off-duty stroll with Eddie.

"It's his time to be a dog, out with dad for a walk, and he knows that," MacInnis said.

That relationship, however, is something MacInnismust dismiss from his mind when he sends Eddie into a risky situation, such as searching for explosives, which is his specialty.

Our dogs are not wild, savage creatures. When they find a missing child, we want the dog to lick that child in the face, to let them know, 'It's OK, I'm here to take you home.- Sgt. KentMacInnis

"You need to mentally prepare for those situations that may occur, where you may have to send your dog to sacrifice your dog in order for the greater good of the public or even myself. He may have to save my life," MacInnis said.

"I know I may have to send Eddie in to do that. I guess, to me, as long as I know his death or his sacrifice is doing that making sure I go home safely or your child is going home safely I can accept that. And I honour that.

"That's how I wrap my head around the whole process."

As an experienced handler, MacInnis raised and trained Eddie, and when the dog's career comes to an end (police dogs are typically in the field for two to eight years, depending on their health), MacInnishopes to keep him at home with his wife and three kids.

Officer-in-training Tuco wears a Boston police K9 harness at nine weeks old. (Jonathan Kozowyk/Courtesy of Massachusetts Vest-A-Dog)

Although RCMPdogs are trained to be fearless when the job demands it, they also know when a gentle paw is needed.

"Our dogs are not wild, savage creatures. When they find a missing child, we want the dog to lick that child in the face, to let them know, 'It's OK, I'm here to take you home,'" MacInnis said.

"But when they find that dangerous suspect, for example, in the bush, the dogs also have to be able to react to that aggressive behaviour and help us take that person into custody."

Training begins with pups

The pups begin training at seven weeks and by the end of their first year, they will be tested to prove they have the cognitive ability as well as the drive, nerve and will to become a member of the force.

If they pass, they goback to the national training centre in Alberta where they originally came from through the breeding program for the final stages of training before beingteamed with a partner.

"You put your heart and soul into his. It's a labour of love when you're raising a dog for working," MacInnis said.

Just as important as preparing them for every scenariois teaching them how to flip the off switch so they canrelax and just be a dog, said MacInnis, who also refers to Eddie as"ahighly trained family friend."

"To me, it's the most rewarding work that I've ever had the privilege of being involved in."

'It's a labour of love when you're raising a dog for working,' MacInnis says. (RCMP)