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Written
by Laurel Walker / Jsonline.com /
Posted: Mar. 10, 2009
A.J. Marhofke isn't in the habit of begging, and neither
are his faithful sidekicks, Molly Mae and Zip.
Well, maybe Zip begs. The lively 10-year-old border collie pushed
tennis balls in my direction again and again, hoping I'd throw
so he could chase.
Molly Mae, a 13-year-old border collie mix who's now blind and
ill, is just not up for play these days.
Neither is Marhofke, and that's the crux of the problem.
This is the team that makes up 911BC
- a nonprofit, volunteer K-9 search-and-rescue unit based in
the Town of Summit and founded by Marhofke in 1969. Marhofke,
62, is a onetime maintenance worker, deputy medical examiner
and paramedic.
But his full-time passion has always been his dogs, K-9 search
training, and responding at no charge to law enforcement all over
the country. His dogs specialize in finding people - dead or alive
- and forensic evidence, the stuff of crime scenes and court cases.
Molly Mae is retired but admired enough by others that in January
Gov. Jim Doyle issued her a formal commendation. Among other accomplishments,
Doyle cited her work in finding a Waukesha County developmentally
disabled man lost in the wild for three days in 1998, her work
with a triple Krnak family homicide in Jefferson County that same
year, and her "gentle demeanor and calming effect on children" during
Marhofke's educational presentations to kids groups.
Molly Mae is out of commission, and now, for up to 12 weeks at
least, Marhofke is, too. That's what has him frustrated and worried.
He fell off a few steps of a ladder last week, seriously breaking
his heel in the process. Surgery is scheduled for Monday, and he's
under strict orders to stay off the foot for up to 12 weeks. He's
not sure how he'll tend to the dogs' needs, especially Molly Mae's,
whose blindness and medications leave her in need of special attention.
Kathryne Jacobs of Cudahy recently struck up a friendship with
Marhofke through a mutual business acquaintance. She's helping
him around the house a couple of days a week and getting him to
doctors' appointments, but she can't be there daily for the dogs.
She's got two of her own. His usual pet sitters are about to leave
on vacation.
Jacobs e-mailed this newspaper with a plea that Marhofke was too
proud to make himself.
"This man who has done so much for others his whole life, and
who has poured his life's energy and life savings into helping
others, now needs some help himself," she wrote.
She's hoping someone will step forward - like a scout troop, dog
lovers, a volunteer pet sitter - with anything that can see him
through this spell. Not only are the dogs a concern, but tasks
as simple as getting mail from the roadside mailbox is a problem.
(If you can help, e-mail Marhofke at k9911@yahoo.com.)
Marhofke's heel injury is only the latest in a terrible string
of bad luck that would bring most people to their knees.
Two of his three adult sons died a year apart, in 2000 and 2001,
one from suicide and one from an accidental drug overdose, he said.
For three years he nursed the love of his life, a woman he'd met
only a year earlier, until she died of ovarian cancer in 2007.
His previous jobs, especially doing death investigations for a
former medical examiner and his K-9 searches for human remains,
had left him accustomed to death. But then it hit home.
"It was never close and personal until I lost my sons," he said. "My
colors changed. It hurt."
He says he had never cried before, but he's cried since, plenty.
A year later he pulled a tendon in his elbow hauling luggage.
A short time later, he broke a wrist. Now, the heel.
Marhofke is the son of a cop and the brother of the Dousman police
chief and a retired Waukesha County sheriff's detective, and his
circle of friends includes many others in law enforcement.
"We're not a huggy, fuzzy family," he said. "They're cops."
When people ask him how he survives his circumstances, he's quick
to say he doesn't have a clue.
But then, after some conversation, it comes out. He does have
a clue.
"If I didn't have my dogs," he said, "I would be dead."
Call Laurel Walker at (262) 650-3183 or e-mail lwalker@journalsentinel.com
Click
Here to read an article about Molly Mae from the Jan 2009
Issue of the Waukesha Freeman Newspaper!
Click
Here to see the commendation letter sent to Molly Mae from
Governor Doyle!
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