Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A search-and-rescue (SAR) dog is a dog trained to respond to crime scenes, accidents, missing persons events, as well as natural or man-made disasters. [1] These dogs detect human scent , which is a distinct odor of skin flakes and water and oil secretions unique to each person [ 1 ] [ 2 ] and have been known to find people under water, snow ...
The "digi dog" team is made up of three-year-old cocker spaniels, Baxter and Louis, who were rescued from a dog shelter by the force, and three and a half-year-old red labrador, Demi.
Detection dog training in U.S. Navy military for drug detection An English Springer Spaniel on duty as a detection dog with the British Transport Police at Waterloo station. A detection dog or sniffer dog is a dog that is trained to use its senses to detect substances such as explosives, illegal drugs, wildlife scat, currency, blood, and contraband electronics such as illicit mobile phones. [1]
Before arresting the Slovers the investigators had a veterinary geneticist perform a DNA analysis on the animal hairs found on the duct tape, which was matched to hairs retrieved from an animal brush that had been used on the dogs Slover Sr. kept on his business property. [9] The police used this evidence to arrest the Slovers.
When rescuers responded to a call at a South Carolina home, they found a hound’s head sticking out a wall. “Spike was sniffing out mischief when he got stuck in the dryer vent,” the Sumter ...
With his handler, the canine executed hundreds of “search warrants obtaining countless pieces of digital evidence leading to the arrests and prosecution of many offenders,” the sheriff’s ...
It was the first case where diatom evidence was used to place a suspect at the scene of the crime and references the subsequent case from Season 2 Forensic Files episode "Micro-Clues", which also used diatom evidence. The evidence helped in the conviction of Christopher Green and Brian Davis, who were both 16 years old and were tried as adults ...
For justices to equate a drug-sniffing dog “instinctually jumping onto the exterior of a car” to a government agent placing a tracking device on a vehicle “stretches logic beyond the ...