• If Laksaboy Forums appears down for you, you can google for "Laksaboy" as it will always be updated with the current URL.

    Due to MDA website filtering, please update your bookmark to https://laksaboyforum.xyz

    1. For any advertising enqueries or technical difficulties (e.g. registration or account issues), please send us a Private Message or contact us via our Contact Form and we will reply to you promptly.

'Good boy!': How police dogs are trained to sniff out drugs, explosives or find missing people

LaksaNews

Myth
Member
SINGAPORE: Scampering along a luggage conveyor belt, two-year-old narcotics detection dog Inca is hard at work, sniffing bag after bag.

Abruptly, the labrador retriever freezes – with his snout hovering right above a red suitcase.

It’s a signal to his trainer: They’ve found what they’re looking for. Inside the bag is a small 30g pack of drugs, wrapped in layers of plastic.

His handler, 3rd Sergeant Aloysius Ho, responds with praise: “Goooood boy!” He also brandishes a yellow rubber ball – Inca’s reward for a job well done.

The dog wastes no time, chewing excitedly on his bounty before starting up a game of fetch with his handler.

It’s an example of the positive reinforcement the Police K-9 unit uses to train their dogs, rewarding them with the ball for desired behaviours.

“The reward will make the dogs more likely to repeat such behaviours that will help its handlers achieve the mission,” said the police.

dsc_6203.jpg

Inca, a two-year-old labrador with the Police K-9 unit, sniffing luggage during his training as a narcotics detection dog. (Photo: CNA/Gaya Chandramohan)
dsc_5525.jpg

Real drugs are planted in the luggage for Inca to detect. (Photo: CNA/Gaya Chandramohan)
dsc_6210.jpg

Narcotics detection dog Inca runs up and down a baggage carousel before stopping to stare at a suitcase – indicating he has detected drugs inside. (Photo: CNA/Gaya Chandramohan)
dsc_6233.jpg

The handler throws a ball to the dog as a reward for detecting drugs in the suitcase. (Photo: CNA/Gaya Chandramohan)
dsc_5610.jpg

Inca plays with a ball with his handler, 3rd Sergeant Aloysius Ho, after the dog successfully located drugs during his training. (Photo: CNA/Gaya Chandramohan)

Besides training pups like Inca to sniff out narcotics, the Police K-9 unit – which has about 240 working dogs – also trains them to find explosives, track suspects or missing persons, or help with patrols and security coverage.

The unit has had about 100 successful cases every year over the past three years, the police said.

Dash, a five-year-old black labrador retriever, was the star of one such case.

In October 2020, the police were alerted after a man was found unresponsive in a car along Bukit Timah Road.

Dash detected something below the driver’s seat and arm rest area.

This helped uncover 31 bags of a “brownish powdery substance” and a bag of a “crystallised substance”, all believed to be controlled drugs, the police said.

At a media visit to the K-9 centre in Choa Chu Kang, Dash makes another appearance – this time, identifying someone carrying drugs from a row of four people.

A large fan blows from behind them, amplifying their scent. This set up is similar to ones used at Woodlands and Tuas Checkpoints.

Soon, she homes in on a suspect, pounces against a metal grille separating them to get a deeper whiff, and then starts gnawing at it.

She has found the person carrying the drugs – drawing praise and pats from her handler, 2nd Sergeant Choi Jia Wen.

dsc_6130_0.jpg

2nd Sergeant Choi Jia Wen and narcotics detection dog Dash work together to find the person carrying drugs in a line-up. (Photo: CNA/Gaya Chandramohan)
dsc_6138_0.jpg

Dash successfully locates the "suspect" carrying drugs and alerts her handler. (Photo: CNA/Gaya Chandramohan)

In another training room, Koby, an energetic two-year-old English springer spaniel, is looking for explosives.

Slightly nervous, the dog needs some coaxing from his handler, Station Inspector See Toh Wai Leng.

After zipping between stacks of crates, he stops at a red box on a low shelf. Staring at it dead-on, he taps his front paws repeatedly, as if to signal: “Here!”

dsc_5776.jpg

Station Inspector See Toh Wai Leng and Koby, a two-year-old English springer spaniel, work together to locate drugs during training. (Photo: CNA/Gaya Chandramohan)
dsc_5885.jpg

Station Inspector See Toh Wai Leng and Koby in training. (Photo: CNA/Gaya Chandramohan)
dsc_5837.jpg

Koby standing at attention and alerting her handler when she locates the hidden drugs. (Photo: CNA/Gaya Chandramohan)
dsc_5963.jpg

Dog handler Station Inspector See Toh Wai Leng with her canine Koby. (Photo: CNA/Gaya Chandramohan)
dsc_5725.jpg

Koby is rewarded with a ball after he successfully locates drugs during training. (Photo: CNA/Gaya Chandramohan)

TRAINING PROCESS​


To get to this stage, officers must undergo at least 12 weeks of training to become proficient in the basics of handling a working dog. The dogs too undergo 12 weeks of training before they are ready for deployment.

The training process is critical, said Superintendent of Police Tan Khoon Seng, who is the unit’s operations officer.

“(It) is incredibly important because it strengthens the bond between the handler and the dog under his or her charge. This, in turn, translates to higher operational effectiveness at the frontline.”

Once in deployment, the dogs are trained for about 15 minutes to an hour per day.

dsc_6400.jpg

Koby, a two-year-old English springer spaniel with the Police K-9 unit. (Photo: CNA/Gaya Chandramohan)
dsc_6426.jpg

Inca, a two-year-old labrador with the Police K-9 unit. (Photo: CNA/Gaya Chandramohan)
dsc_6453.jpg

Police K-9 dogs work and train closely with their handlers to ensure operational efficiency in the field. Officers undergo at least 12 weeks of training to become proficient in the basics of handling a working dog. (Photo: CNA/Gaya Chandramohan)

Station Inspector See Toh added that she has to make sure her dog can respond to any activations “swiftly and safely”. To do this, she must give it enough rest and keep it away from hazards.

She added that handlers bond with their dogs through grooming, walking or exercise, which also helps the dog’s physical and mental health.

“The process of training a dog is like raising a child. It takes a lot of patience and dedication.

"But the satisfaction you get from transforming an untrained dog into an operational dog is priceless.”

Continue reading...
 
Back
Top