By Samantha Malott
For years, dogs in police K-9 units have been used to detect several
illegal drugs, including marijuana, but with pot’s legalization in
Washington, there has been a complication.
Since the dog may be
detecting a legal amount of marijuana – and can’t communicate that it is
detecting another drug or a humongous amount of pot – police and
sheriff’s deputies now have to document additional reasons why they
believe an illegal amount of marijuana or a different controlled
substance has been found. Otherwise, their search might not have
probable cause and could be deemed illegal by a court.
“They’re not being retrained,” Sgt. Keith Cooper, of the Whitman County Sheriff’s Office, said. “It’s almost impossible.”
Still, Cooper said, “We don’t plan on getting rid of our dog.”
Cooper’s K-9 partner Unix, a German shepherd the sheriff’s office purchased
in 2009 from Germany, was trained before the legalization of marijuana
and can identify marijuana, methamphetamine, heroin, crack cocaine
and cocaine.
Cooper said because it is still illegal to own over
an ounce of marijuana or be in possession under the age of 21, there is
still plenty for Unix to do, along with identifying the other drugs.
Unix can also be called out to help execute search warrants with the
Quad Cities Drug Task Force or the Drug Enforcement Administration,
although they don’t usually get involved unless very large quantities
are involved, he said.
Bob Calkins, Washington State Patrol
spokesman, said a trooper has to present other facts, besides just the
dog alerting on a vehicle, to believe a drug other than marijuana is
inside.
Other information, such as intelligence from an informant or an admission from a passenger, would be enough for a judge to issue a search warrant, he said.
For
example, if a dog alerts on the trunk of a vehicle and a meth pipe is
seen on the passenger seat, that would provide enough reason to apply for a search warrant, he said.
“You have a lot of other factors in there,” Cooper said.
A
memo from the Washington Association of Prosecuting Attorneys said
officers need “additional evidence” to support the belief a drug other
than marijuana, more than an ounce of marijuana is present, or that the
individual is involved in manufacturing or distributing marijuana. That
could include statements from the suspect or informants, criminal
history, evidence of impairment, the location of the canine’s alert or
apparent false panels to the door panels, according to the memo.
“Marijuana was the first drug we trained on,” Cooper said.
Once
trained on marijuana, Cooper said, he can’t be 100 percent sure Unix is
not alerting on marijuana, rather than other drugs. Imagine telling a
human who is right-handed to use their left hand to write, he said.
“It’s muscle memory,” Cooper said.
So,
even if training on one drug – marijuana – isn’t reinforced ever again,
it can’t be guaranteed the original training won’t pop up years later,
Calkins said.
“We have stopped any new reinforcement training of marijuana,” he said. “But there is a danger it may hit out of the clear blue sky.”
Unix still has at least another eight years of work left in him, Cooper said.
There
is an initial eight-week-long training course, re-certification every
two years and 16 additional hours of training each month, he said. The
county invests $25,000 to $30,000 in training one dog, Cooper said.
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