Below is
an article dated 6-29-2000 from the Waukesha Freeman, a local newspaper who
covered the Annual 911BC Seminar.
Search and rescue seminar teaches the basics
By STEVE LOUDEN, Freeman Staff
DOUSMAN, WI: About 30 dogs and their handlers found their way to the third annual
K-9 Search and Rescue Seminar on Saturday at 911 B.C. K-9 Search and Recovery,
the home-based business of A.J. Marhofke.
"We hope to teach them what it takes to teach a dog to search for people
and the beginning basics of what it takes to search", said Michael Forest
Neiman, truck lieutenant of the Dousman Fire Department. I hope (the seminar)
helps somebody down the line.
Many owners, like Roger Danielsen of Waukesha, have been training their pooches
on their own. And many, like Danielsen, have not taken part in many professional
courses or seminars like the one held Saturday.
"I've been working her on my own for a couple of years", Danielsen
said of his Newfoundland, Rigel, who is named after the star in Orion's belt.
"Then I ran out of training opportunities".
Danielsen and Rigel went to the event looking for new ideas and training methods.
Danielsen also wanted to glimpse the equipment available for dog training and
to make contacts in the canine community.
Danielsen is training Rigel mainly in water rescue, though they have tried other
options. "At six months we took a cadaver course," Danielsen said.
"She actually found the material."
First class
Bob Leonard, Dousman Fire Department assistant chief, lectured on the Global
Positioning System, demonstrating the held-held unit and told how it must be
coordinated with the right map.
"It tells you exactly where you are", Leonard said.
"Civilian models of the GPS unit are accurate within 50 feet", he
said, "while military models pinpoint within 3 feet. The government recently
signed a bill", he added, "opening the military GPS system to civilians".
Leonard told how GPS is useful in searches such as the one for Tom Reinders,
a mentally disabled, man who walked away from his foster home near Dousman on
Sept. 27, 1998. Reinders was found at the end of a 52-hour search.
"The search party learned many things during the search", Leonard
said.
"We thought it would be short search. We thought we would find him by the
time the Packers game started", Leonard said. "So we didn't mobilize
a full search right away. That was a lesson we learned".
He added that the search party kept moving the command post down the road, causing
confusion among the searchers.
"We learned not to move it", he said.
The group also learned to keep the command post, where the progress of the search
is often discussed, away from the home of the family of the lost person.
"It's not good for the family", Leonard said.
Another aspect
Mike Andree, identification officer with the Waukesha County Sheriff's Department,
presented another aspect of search and rescue.
"I'm the guy you don't want at your scene, because that means someone is
dead", Andree said. "Death is my life".
Andree's duties revolve around the scene of a cadaver, and that includes preserving
the evidence and learning what had happened.
"It's like an archaeological dig", Andree said. "These things
take time".
Andree demonstrated his job with the aid of Marhofke and Molly Mae, a border
collie trained to search for cadavers. Molly Mae searched a small portion of
field on Marhofke's farm, and quickly located where a doll, which had been placed
on a bag with scent, was buried.