Pubdate: Sun, 14 Apr 2002
Source: Daily Advertiser, The (LA)
Contact:  2002 South Louisiana Publishing
Website: http://www.theadvertiser.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1670
Author: Todd Billiot

CANINES SOLVING CRIMES

Local Police Dog Trainers Recognized Nationally

LAFAYETTE -- When an armed robbery suspect in Terrebonne Parish fled the 
crime scene in his car, he may have thought he was on the road to freedom.

But Ringo, a Belgian Malinois dog trained by Jack Robicheaux of K-9 
Concepts, Broussard, tracked the suspect while he was driving the car, and 
found the car two miles away, said Lee Roy Lierette, a deputy with the 
Terrebonne Parish Sheriff's Office.

"He (Ringo) was able to track the skin and hair coming off his arm," 
Lierette said.

Because of stories like this, K-9 Concepts has developed a reputation as 
one of the top police dog training centers in the nation, according to law 
enforcement officials.

"The owner is extremely knowledgeable, probably one of the most 
knowledgeable in the country," said Lt. Brad Church with the Gretna Police 
Department outside of New Orleans.

Dogs from K-9 Concepts know what they are doing. In Gretna, a city that 
covers a three-mile area, more than $4 million in cash and thousands of 
pounds of illegal drugs in the past nine years have been taken off the 
streets because of the dogs, Church said.

The Gretna Police Department owns three dual-purpose dogs from K-9 
Concepts. Dual purpose dogs are cross-trained for patrol (tracking) and 
narcotic detection.

The Lafayette Police Department owns several dual-purpose dogs from K-9 
Concepts.

Jack and Sheree Robicheaux established K-9 Concepts in 1986 to train 
patrol, narcotic and dual-purpose dogs. They have trained dogs for more 
than 25 years. Dogs and handlers have been trained for police and sheriff 
departments in states such as Idaho, New Jersey, Kansas and North Dakota.

The Robicheauxs use a training center in Broussard and abandoned buildings 
in Lafayette to train the dogs. They are always looking for new places to 
train the dogs, such as old buildings and mobile homes, Jack Robicheaux said.

Jack Robicheaux said he obtains the dogs from breeders in Europe. He needs 
several weeks to train the dogs, he said. Each year, he sells 40 to 50 dogs 
and trains 200 dog-handlers.

Not all dogs will make it through the rigorous training, Robicheaux said. A 
dog has to have the right personality. It has to want to retrieve, and 
sniff and track, he said. A police dog's career can last several years, 
usually until health problems that come with age begin to set in, 
Robicheaux said.

"The dog has to pass a test," Robicheaux said. "They have to pass 
sociability and noise-sensitivity tests. They can't be scared. Every dog is 
different, just like people."

Gill Osborne of the Victoria, Texas, Police Department, said his department 
has bought dogs from K-9 Concepts for several years.

"Jack's reputation precedes himself," Osborne said.

James Carinhas, with the Patterson Police Department, near Morgan City, agrees.

"You get the best dogs here," Carinhas said.
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MAP posted-by: Jackl