Searches for Lisa

12 KCPD units, KCPD 690 overhead, Randolph PD. A good majority at the grain elevator again. Almost 3 miles from where the dog went missing? More units parked between grain elevator & Sams Town. I'll try to drive back by shortly.
 
12 KCPD units, KCPD 690 overhead, Randolph PD. A good majority at the grain elevator again. Almost 3 miles from where the dog went missing? More units parked between grain elevator & Sams Town. I'll try to drive back by shortly.

Indepmo, how far is this search at the grain elevator from where you spotted the gathering of police cars the other day?

My hinky meter is edging toward high.
 
12 KCPD units, KCPD 690 overhead, Randolph PD. A good majority at the grain elevator again. Almost 3 miles from where the dog went missing? More units parked between grain elevator & Sams Town. I'll try to drive back by shortly.

Are any of the units NKCPD?
 
Did they let this dog "escape" to do his work? I'm thinking out loud.
 
Are any of the units NKCPD?
I saw NKCPD cars just south of NE34th and N Brighton towards the dirt pit. There were cars at the entrance to the dirt pit on the north outer road between Searcy Creek and N Brighton, but I wasn't on that road itself to see who's cars they were.
 
Did they let this dog "escape" to do his work? I'm thinking out loud.
No police department is going to let a dog go loose for over 24 hours on purpose. The traffic danger alone would prevent this, let alone other dangers. It sounds like this particular dog might be a danger to the public by the sounds of it.
 
No, they would never cut the dog loose to search. First of all way way too dangerous for both the dog and innocent people around and second, the dog actually needs directions and commands to follow.

If the ages and times are correct, this dog would have been 16 months old when he started working, not unheard of but certainly on the young side and quite young for a malinois for sure. They are pumping them out younger and younger now so they can make more profit, but at the expense of everyone. 6 months on the force is not what I would call experienced either. This may be as simple as a dog that was improperly trained or at minimum not trained for long enough and is now running around looking for a mate (he is at that age after all. :great:)
 
No police department is going to let a dog go loose for over 24 hours on purpose. The traffic danger alone would prevent this, let alone other dangers. It sounds like this particular dog might be a danger to the public by the sounds of it.

I'm waiting for a "miracle"
 
No police department is going to let a dog go loose for over 24 hours on purpose. The traffic danger alone would prevent this, let alone other dangers. It sounds like this particular dog might be a danger to the public by the sounds of it.

No sound dog should run up and bite someone unprovoked, but the fact this dog bolted is making me nervous as to the quality of his training.
 
The dog has been unaccounted for for 36 hours now. Looking for it around here with it's coloring will be no easy task as it IS the color of most of the ground now.
 
kinda o/t but this quote makes me a little sad

"If you see this dog just call us; don't try to call it, don't try to approach it, don't try to do anything to it. To put this into perspective this dog has been with us since June of this year and I've never petted the dog, I've never petted the dog because it's not a pet," he said.

I always thought that K9 handlers petted the dogs and cared for them. They say there is an attachment between them so why not pet them? Maybe I am misunderstanding what he said but that isn't how I perceived the dogs were treated.
 
kinda o/t but this quote makes me a little sad

"If you see this dog just call us; don't try to call it, don't try to approach it, don't try to do anything to it. To put this into perspective this dog has been with us since June of this year and I've never petted the dog, I've never petted the dog because it's not a pet," he said.

I always thought that K9 handlers petted the dogs and cared for them. They say there is an attachment between them so why not pet them? Maybe I am misunderstanding what he said but that isn't how I perceived the dogs were treated.
This very statement is why I said it seemed like this particular dog sounded like it was a threat to the community at large. Everything about what has been published about this story seems to question the dog's and/or the handlers true training.
 
I feel so horrible for the poor dog. Seems it's never had much attention, it's only 22 months old. Don't blame it for making a run for it, but I wonder if it's survival instincts are zero. I feel so sad for the dog. Bred to work, almost like a slave or one of those puppy mill dogs perhaps. They sound so insensitive.
 
kinda o/t but this quote makes me a little sad

"If you see this dog just call us; don't try to call it, don't try to approach it, don't try to do anything to it. To put this into perspective this dog has been with us since June of this year and I've never petted the dog, I've never petted the dog because it's not a pet," he said.

I always thought that K9 handlers petted the dogs and cared for them. They say there is an attachment between them so why not pet them? Maybe I am misunderstanding what he said but that isn't how I perceived the dogs were treated.
The way I read the article, your quote was from the chief of police and not the dog's handler.
The dogs handler may very well pet him but the chief was warning citizens not to do so.
 
Butttt the chief quotes that these dogs are not pets so therefore they should not be petted or given attention (my take that is). Sad but I hope the dog gets away to a fabulous life somewhere else. I wonder what they will do if they find it???
 

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