| Because
of the events surrounding September 11, 2001 and its
aftermath, law enforcement agencies' need for dogs have
increased. Our organization is honored to have been
selected to help agencies meet these needs.
Since September 11th,
a number of individuals and companies have gone into
the business of training explosive detection dogs, but
they have done so with very little knowledge of how
to accurately train such dogs and with little regard
of the quality of life the dogs have. As a result, dogs
that are improperly trained, worked too hard and with
too many different handlers, or are "cross-trained"
(trained to sniff both bombs and drugs, for example)
are making their way into public life. It is probably
just a matter of time before one of these dogs misses
a bomb or makes a wrong decision which could have serious
consequences. By comparison, PBB is honored to work
with the NYPD Bomb Squad and other law enforcement agencies
because we have visited their training headquarters,
we have seen the love between handlers and their dogs,
we have seen the conditions under which the dogs live
while they are being trained and we know that the dogs,
once trained, do not live in kennels but live at home
with their trainers.
Two bomb technicians
from the NYPD Bomb Squad visited the Edna Mahan Correctional
Facility for Women to meet and thank the women for the
work they are doing. One of the bomb sniffing dogs currently
in the NYPD Bomb Squad, "Sheeba," was raised
at the Edna Mahan facility and came back with her handler,
Police Officer Paul Perricone, as a graduate of the
NYPD's program. It was wonderful to have Officer Perricone
come back and thank the inmate who raised his dog, for
at that moment, it wasn't a police officer talking to
an inmate; it was a bomb technician who spends his days
making New York City safe for private citizens —
and who depends on his dog to make the right decisions
— speaking with the young woman who raised this
incredible dog. All labels and barriers were nonexistent
as two people discussed the pride and joy who sat between
them, eagerly wagging her tail and looking up at people
she loved.
Puppies Behind Bars gives inmates
the opportunity to contribute to society rather than
take from it, and lets law enforcement see that inmates
are capable of doing something positive for the community.
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