By
Hank Huber
The New York State Office of Fire Prevention
& Control Canine Accelerant Detection Training Program
has graduated three dogs April 17 after completing 300 hours
of preparation.
The course is an eight-week program for prospective
Canine Teams offered at the New York State Academy
of Fire Science in Montour Falls, N. Y.
Part of the training includes environmental
conditioning such as exposure to aircraft, water craft and
fire apparatus. Three canine trainees and one veteran spent
a little more than an hour with their handlers on the Buffalo
Fire Department’s Fire Boat, getting used to the experience.
The dogs were a little apprehensive going
up the narrow ramp onto the boat for the first time, but
the experience was meant to expose them to new situations
and equipment. Attention and reassurance by their partners
lessened the dogs’ uneasiness, and helped reinforce
the trust between the two.
Once aboard they were fine. The dogs’
handlers walked them around the deck as the 103-year-old
fire boat The Edward M. Cotter made its
way into Lake Erie.
Little Buddy, a yellow lab,
was handled by Lt. Garnell Smith, the Buffalo
fire investigation office commander.
New York State Fire Investigator Jim
Cable was paired with Bucca, a
golden retriever he named after New York City Fire Marshal
Ronald Bucca, who died in the September
11 World Trade Center attacks.
The dogs seemed to enjoy the cold breeze and
new smells as the Cotter passed the Navel Park’s ships
The Sullivans and The Little Rock,
and the submarine The Croaker. They showed
no fear as the boat loudly cut through the ice, pushing
huge sheets of it under the frozen surface of the Inner
Harbor.
After returning to the Academy in Montour
Falls, the three graduates and their partners received certification
as Official Canine Accelerant Detection Teams.
Eve Bucca, the widow of Fire
Marshal Bucca, traveled from NYC to the Finger Lakes/Watkins
Glen region to be present for the ceremony. Her husband,
who gave his life in the fight to save others, now gives
his name to one who will help take arsonists off the streets
and make the world a little safer.
The Training
During instruction, the
dogs are trained to detect ignitable liquid vapor residue
from such substances as:
- gasoline
- kerosene
- alcohol
- charcoal lighter fluid
- Coleman camping fuel
- paint thinner
The accelerant detection canines use their
sensitive noses to discover accelerant residue sites to
supplement fire investigators using visual indicators, or
electronic detection instruments.
Dogs are used because their sense of smell
is considered to be about 100 times greater than that of
humans, and can distinguish between accelerant vapors and
vapors given off by synthetic furnishings burned in the
fire. Items made of plastic, rubber and polystyrene often
cause the electronic detectors to indicate false-positive
results.
“Their ability to discriminate is phenomenal,”
said New York State Arson Investigator and canine handler
Dale H. Moone.
Moone’s partner is Alex,
a 70-pound, 7-year-old golden retriever with more than 500
searches credited to him.
He said that one time, after Alex found the
backside of a terrified skunk stuck in a ground hog hole,
he had to put him to the test in the investigation training
burn building because the dog had been sprayed in the face
at close range. Less than 12 hours after being hit directly
in the nose with liquid skunk spray, Alex was able to discriminate
minute incremented samples of fire accelerants flawlessly,
according to Moone.
The significance of this is that even in structures
where the debris is considerable and burnt synthetics have
produced deceiving vapors, dogs can save valuable investigation
time by indicating areas where an accelerant might have
been used.
Fire investigation is an extremely difficult
task, according to Louisiana State Deputy Marshall
and Canine Accelerant Detection Team dog handler Ric Abbott.
“You go into an environment that has
been completely corrupted from the get-go, then you have
20 firemen going through the place, walking on everything.
That’s after they’ve put 3,000 gallons of water
on it,” he said.
Abbott trained with his 1-year old Labrador
retriever, Big Buddy, who was rescued from
an animal shelter in Rochester.
He said that Louisiana has only three fire
dogs, and Buddy will be assigned to cover the whole northern
section of the state.
“We have a void to fill, and we think
Buddy’s going to fill that void,” he said.
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