Cop next door

tpemiles

Active Member
hey everyone.. i got a hopefully quick question. so i'm moving next month into a new house and i think there may be a k9 cop living 2 doors down. if i grew, would the cop dog freak out all the time? or would i be able to control the smell enough?? thanks anyone for their help!
 

Billyy

Active Member
That really doesn't sound like such a great idea. I'd suggest you find another place to live if you're planning on growing.
 

mygirls

Medical Marijuana (MOD)
hey everyone.. i got a hopefully quick question. so i'm moving next month into a new house and i think there may be a k9 cop living 2 doors down. if i grew, would the cop dog freak out all the time? or would i be able to control the smell enough?? thanks anyone for their help!
come on youreally need someone elsesadvise for this. your just asking for jail time.:dunce:
 

tilemaster

Well-Known Member
a cop lives directly accross the street from me. county sherriff. its suks, its spookey, but it ur a legal MJ patient who intends on making good on ur limits. i say fuck it why not. i just dont act stupid on my front porch. dont let retards come over to ur pad. spend most time w/ a girlfriend to imply "just doing the family thing" and i bet u be fine..........and of coarse take some smell pre cautions. Plus wouldnt it be fun grown all that stankey right under lil piggies nose?
 

Mama Kindbud

Well-Known Member
a cop lives directly accross the street from me. county sherriff. its suks, its spookey, but it ur a legal MJ patient who intends on making good on ur limits. i say fuck it why not. i just dont act stupid on my front porch. dont let retards come over to ur pad. spend most time w/ a girlfriend to imply "just doing the family thing" and i bet u be fine..........and of coarse take some smell pre cautions. Plus wouldnt it be fun grown all that stankey right under lil piggies nose?
Wouldn't it be fun...Only if fun to you is becoming someones bitch on the inside.
 

simpsonsampson420

Well-Known Member
if you live where MJ is legal/decriminalized then ya.... go for it.. just be smart.... if you live where its not legal/decriminalized then unless you make your grow room smell proof i wouldnt suggest it... your asking for trouble... especially if he has a K9
 

Johnnyorganic

Well-Known Member
I would not consider living anywhere near a police dog if I merely smoked weed and nothing more. Growing is out of the question. That dog will signal 'drugs' to his handler so often that the copper will have no trouble locating you. The dog will give you up. He will provide probable cause to the judge who will sign the search warrant. The K-9 handler cop will call in his real-cop buddies and they will invade your home, seize your property, and take you away.
 

tilemaster

Well-Known Member
some1's bitch inside? If ur MJ patient, i wouldnt trip on a concealed grow living next to an District Attorney, a cop, whoever, even a fed, now that were over the hump with a new federal administration. now if ur growing "illegally", thats a whole nother bag of issues. If u live in anysort of subdivision and grow theres probably a cop living amongst u nearby. If ur legal, its medicinal, tell me why the fuck u'd be some1's bitch in the Pen? come on now. any if any1 wanted to fuck my ass in the pen they'd have to make it through the brown jungle of hair first, i think they'll be taking the pretty boys first hah
 

tilemaster

Well-Known Member
Heres a story of 1 caregiver, letting the local police, Missouri River Drug Enforcement Task Force, and the District Attorney , KNOW about his grow operation before setting up shop, and inviting them to LOOK! I am aware i should not advise you of anything , because its a choice we all have to make, catered to our personal live, and live le hood (spell)....Heres the storty pretty interesting:


Montana Business Growing Medical Marijuana


Tom Lutey
September 11, 2008
Arizona Daily Star

LIVINGSTON, Mont. — Downtown Livingston has gone to pot.
In the open garage doorway of a small white warehouse, six blocks from the Park County Sheriff's Office and minutes from the nouveau eateries and art galleries where tourists stroll, Homer Terry churns ice into a five-gallon bucket of marijuana.
It's a hot Friday afternoon. The whir of Terry's power drill and stir paddle mixes with the shovel chucks of a nearby railroad crew spreading gravel. He gives the customary Montana greeting of a slight head nod and an easy smile to passers-by, but otherwise he keeps working, blending bits of marijuana into a potent smokable paste.
Some would say Terry is making hashish, but the man with drill in hand churning an icy drink of cannabis prefers to say he's harvesting "tri-chromes," that is, the secretions of resins rich in THC forming on the exterior of discarded marijuana plant matter. Others would say Terry and the other half-dozen volunteers toiling on the northern edge of a busy thoroughfare in this sleepy railroad town are growing dope.
Terry, a volunteer at the medical-marijuana growing co-op, would say he's making medicine. And the state of Montana agrees.
It has been four years since Montana voters cast an overwhelming vote to legalize medical marijuana. The ballot initiative, allowing patients with a doctor's referral to grow as many as six marijuana plants for medicinal purposes, garnered more voter support that November than Gov. Brian Schweitzer or U.S. Rep. Denny Rehberg.
In practice, however the law is receiving mixed reviews. Patient groups and legally sanctioned growers say they now navigate a vague legal path with enough unexpected curves to send some, unintentionally, into violation of drug laws.
Likewise, law enforcement officials say they are seeing the emergence of a marijuana culture they didn't expect, with a few large indoor marijuana farms and a shield of confidentiality preventing detectives from determining whether business is being done according to law.
In practice, medical marijuana didn't take root right away in Montana. Even after the law passed with 63 percent approval Nov. 2, 2004, newspaper accounts of the vote suggested that "Montanans suffering from certain medical conditions may be able to legally smoke marijuana" with emphasis on the word "may," not "can." Prior to the vote, Montanans were warned by U.S. deputy drug czar Scott Burns that federal law trumps state law and that Montana wouldn't be a safe harbor for legal cannabis.
Except for a few incidents, however, medical marijuana in Montana hasn't resulted in many arrests by federal or state officials. State registration of patients approved to use medical marijuana has more than tripled in the last year, said Roy Kemp, who issues medical-marijuana licenses for the state Department of Public Health and Human Services.
"We had 1,280 registered patients this July," said Kemp, who receives 40 to 50 applications a week. "We had 358 last July."
State health officials run a registry of patients, Kemp said. It tracks the number of participating doctors, currently 162, as well as the number of appointed caregivers, 386. The state never discloses the names of the people involved to anyone, including police.
What Kemp will disclose are the categories of qualifying conditions into which registrants fall. Patients suffering from severe and chronic pain with nausea or muscle spasms represent 70 percent of those registered for what's conversationally called a green card, a plastic medical-marijuana license good for one year. Patients suffering from severe seizures coupled with severe nausea and muscle spasms are the second largest group, at 11 percent.
One patient's experience — included in the remaining 8 percent of registered patients — is Donna Woodworth, who has struggled with diminishing weight since being treated for colon cancer 25 years ago. Appetite loss due to medical treatment or chronic condition is one of about a dozen conditions covered by the state medical-marijuana law.
"Suddenly, I can eat what I call my old-lady diet," said Woodworth, "yogurt and mashed potatoes and some bread. Basically that's what I eat."
Since being approved for medical marijuana, Woodworth said, her body weight has increased from 80 pounds to 112. Using cannabis is not an easy subject to talk about, said Woodworth, who lives in Livingston and receives her marijuana from Montana Caregivers, a registered corporation that grows marijuana for some 50 medical-marijuana patients.
Marijuana use bears a stigma with or without the state card, said Woodworth, who nervously spoke of her experience while standing in Montana Caregivers' Park Avenue office. People who casually know she uses cannabis assume she's doing something wrong.
At the mention of implied wrongdoing, grower Ronita Minnick begins to laugh. She, her husband, David, and another grower formed a sort of co-op and started growing medical marijuana a year ago. Friends then were warning that they were all going to jail. They've been waiting for the bad news ever since.
"There were a lot of people saying, 'You're not in jail yet?' " said Minnick. "And some are still saying 'You're not in jail?' "
'Caregivers' with green thumbs
The Minnicks are registered patients. Ronita has a degenerative diabetic eye disease. Dave's spine was injured in an auto accident that causes him chronic pain. But they're also caregivers, the term used by the state to identify people chosen by patients to grow medical marijuana.
Caregivers have to be selected by a patient. No selection, no authorization to grow marijuana legally. Each patient is allowed to have up to six marijuana plants. A caregiver with several patients can have a pretty big crop. The growers in Minnicks' co-op are raising about 300 medical-marijuana plants in multiple stages under grow lights inside a secured building.
The operation is legitimate under state medical-marijuana standards, but the setting mirrors a noncertified operation. There are smoking pipes and rolling papers in the break room, along with smoke-free marijuana vaporizers for patients concerned about carcinogens.
The varieties of marijuana grown sport names like AK-47, White Widow and Kush. Different varieties produce different highs.
"It's a large grow operation," said Tim Barnes, a detective with the Missouri River Drug Task Force. "Minnick was in the newspapers, so we've always known what was going on. Dave's pretty much been forthcoming."
Lingering legal questions
Dave Minnick not only invited the detectives to check out his crop, he said he approached the Park County attorney before he got going so law enforcement wouldn't be alarmed. They were still alarmed, Minnick said. The county prosecutor first told Minnick to leave, then called in a deputy and asked the caregiver to stay once he realized Minnick wasn't joking.
Barnes isn't sure large grow operations were expected when the medical-marijuana initiative passed. It's one of many issues he thinks the law overlooked or ignored. Growers aren't required to keep records, and because state records are tightly guarded, it's difficult to determine if the marijuana is being grown for registered patients and if the amount of marijuana grown exceeds the limit of six plants per patient.
Barnes also has concerns about caregivers growing a small number of plants in homes where children are present. And he's not entirely convinced everyone registered for medical marijuana needs it. There is no age limit for legally using medical marijuana.
"One of the things that concerns me is that more people are moving here because they can have access to medical marijuana," Barnes said. "It's all over the state, not just here."
Patients and caregivers have concerns, too, said Tom Daubert, with Patients and Families United, an advocacy group for medical-marijuana users.
Working with law enforcement, Daubert and others are trying to work some of the kinks out of the state law. Patients and Families United would like to see some allowances for transportation by nonpatients. Patients too ill to travel now must rely on caregiver home delivery or courier, which poses problems because only patients and caregivers can possess the drug. Barnes and other detectives want more accountability written into the law.
One Missoula patient committed suicide last year after drug enforcement agents seized her marijuana because it was sent through United Parcel Service.
The group would also like to increase the amount of marijuana a patient is allowed to have on hand from an ounce, roughly a lunch bag full, to a larger amount. The group lobbied the 2007 Legislature to make the changes, but to no avail.
Federal officials would like to put the kibosh on medical marijuana, in part because they believe it undermines drug prevention programs such as the elementary school program Drug Abuse Resistance Education, or DARE.
"I don't have a lot of huge worries about it because I trust Americans to fix what they break, but I'm worried about the message we're sending to our kids. That's a tragedy," said Jeffrey Sweetin, special agent in charge of the Rocky Mountain Division of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency. "The kids that flunked DARE are now telling your kids, my kids, that this is medicine."
Marijuana is classified as a Schedule I narcotic, meaning that the federal government believes it has no useful purpose. Doctors can't prescribe the drug without breaking the law, they can only recommend it. Government agencies like the National Institutes of Health have argued for years that marijuana is damaging, Sweetin said. That argument was not heard in states where marijuana advocates have persuaded voters to allow medical marijuana.
"Please understand, we don't ignore marijuana grow operations," Sweetin said. "I assure you, there are thresholds at every U.S. attorney's office."
Not all doctors agree that marijuana is harmful. Ed Stickney, a retired physician in Billings, has written referrals for several patients. He said that particularly in pain cases, marijuana poses less of an addiction threat than powerful painkillers like OxyContin.
"I contend that if it were discovered today, marijuana would be considered a miracle drug," Stickney said.
 

Johnnyorganic

Well-Known Member
I think it's safe to assume that the OP is not a legal medical patient; otherwise he would not give two shits about the K-9 in the first place. MMJ states are in the minority. For the rest of us who live in non-medical states and/or are not medical-cannabis users the ever growing population of sworn peace officers is a constant threat.
 

tilemaster

Well-Known Member
Very True excellent PoinT!!!! I guess there are only like 15 out of 50 states, and i bet theres 35 States with a lot of Piggies!
 

joker152

Well-Known Member
Heres a story of 1 caregiver, letting the local police, Missouri River Drug Enforcement Task Force, and the District Attorney , KNOW about his grow operation before setting up shop, and inviting them to LOOK! I am aware i should not advise you of anything , because its a choice we all have to make, catered to our personal live, and live le hood (spell)....Heres the storty pretty interesting:


Montana Business Growing Medical Marijuana


Tom Lutey
September 11, 2008
Arizona Daily Star

LIVINGSTON, Mont. — Downtown Livingston has gone to pot.
In the open garage doorway of a small white warehouse, six blocks from the Park County Sheriff's Office and minutes from the nouveau eateries and art galleries where tourists stroll, Homer Terry churns ice into a five-gallon bucket of marijuana.
It's a hot Friday afternoon. The whir of Terry's power drill and stir paddle mixes with the shovel chucks of a nearby railroad crew spreading gravel. He gives the customary Montana greeting of a slight head nod and an easy smile to passers-by, but otherwise he keeps working, blending bits of marijuana into a potent smokable paste.
Some would say Terry is making hashish, but the man with drill in hand churning an icy drink of cannabis prefers to say he's harvesting "tri-chromes," that is, the secretions of resins rich in THC forming on the exterior of discarded marijuana plant matter. Others would say Terry and the other half-dozen volunteers toiling on the northern edge of a busy thoroughfare in this sleepy railroad town are growing dope.
Terry, a volunteer at the medical-marijuana growing co-op, would say he's making medicine. And the state of Montana agrees.
It has been four years since Montana voters cast an overwhelming vote to legalize medical marijuana. The ballot initiative, allowing patients with a doctor's referral to grow as many as six marijuana plants for medicinal purposes, garnered more voter support that November than Gov. Brian Schweitzer or U.S. Rep. Denny Rehberg.
In practice, however the law is receiving mixed reviews. Patient groups and legally sanctioned growers say they now navigate a vague legal path with enough unexpected curves to send some, unintentionally, into violation of drug laws.
Likewise, law enforcement officials say they are seeing the emergence of a marijuana culture they didn't expect, with a few large indoor marijuana farms and a shield of confidentiality preventing detectives from determining whether business is being done according to law.
In practice, medical marijuana didn't take root right away in Montana. Even after the law passed with 63 percent approval Nov. 2, 2004, newspaper accounts of the vote suggested that "Montanans suffering from certain medical conditions may be able to legally smoke marijuana" with emphasis on the word "may," not "can." Prior to the vote, Montanans were warned by U.S. deputy drug czar Scott Burns that federal law trumps state law and that Montana wouldn't be a safe harbor for legal cannabis.
Except for a few incidents, however, medical marijuana in Montana hasn't resulted in many arrests by federal or state officials. State registration of patients approved to use medical marijuana has more than tripled in the last year, said Roy Kemp, who issues medical-marijuana licenses for the state Department of Public Health and Human Services.
"We had 1,280 registered patients this July," said Kemp, who receives 40 to 50 applications a week. "We had 358 last July."
State health officials run a registry of patients, Kemp said. It tracks the number of participating doctors, currently 162, as well as the number of appointed caregivers, 386. The state never discloses the names of the people involved to anyone, including police.
What Kemp will disclose are the categories of qualifying conditions into which registrants fall. Patients suffering from severe and chronic pain with nausea or muscle spasms represent 70 percent of those registered for what's conversationally called a green card, a plastic medical-marijuana license good for one year. Patients suffering from severe seizures coupled with severe nausea and muscle spasms are the second largest group, at 11 percent.
One patient's experience — included in the remaining 8 percent of registered patients — is Donna Woodworth, who has struggled with diminishing weight since being treated for colon cancer 25 years ago. Appetite loss due to medical treatment or chronic condition is one of about a dozen conditions covered by the state medical-marijuana law.
"Suddenly, I can eat what I call my old-lady diet," said Woodworth, "yogurt and mashed potatoes and some bread. Basically that's what I eat."
Since being approved for medical marijuana, Woodworth said, her body weight has increased from 80 pounds to 112. Using cannabis is not an easy subject to talk about, said Woodworth, who lives in Livingston and receives her marijuana from Montana Caregivers, a registered corporation that grows marijuana for some 50 medical-marijuana patients.
Marijuana use bears a stigma with or without the state card, said Woodworth, who nervously spoke of her experience while standing in Montana Caregivers' Park Avenue office. People who casually know she uses cannabis assume she's doing something wrong.
At the mention of implied wrongdoing, grower Ronita Minnick begins to laugh. She, her husband, David, and another grower formed a sort of co-op and started growing medical marijuana a year ago. Friends then were warning that they were all going to jail. They've been waiting for the bad news ever since.
"There were a lot of people saying, 'You're not in jail yet?' " said Minnick. "And some are still saying 'You're not in jail?' "
'Caregivers' with green thumbs
The Minnicks are registered patients. Ronita has a degenerative diabetic eye disease. Dave's spine was injured in an auto accident that causes him chronic pain. But they're also caregivers, the term used by the state to identify people chosen by patients to grow medical marijuana.
Caregivers have to be selected by a patient. No selection, no authorization to grow marijuana legally. Each patient is allowed to have up to six marijuana plants. A caregiver with several patients can have a pretty big crop. The growers in Minnicks' co-op are raising about 300 medical-marijuana plants in multiple stages under grow lights inside a secured building.
The operation is legitimate under state medical-marijuana standards, but the setting mirrors a noncertified operation. There are smoking pipes and rolling papers in the break room, along with smoke-free marijuana vaporizers for patients concerned about carcinogens.
The varieties of marijuana grown sport names like AK-47, White Widow and Kush. Different varieties produce different highs.
"It's a large grow operation," said Tim Barnes, a detective with the Missouri River Drug Task Force. "Minnick was in the newspapers, so we've always known what was going on. Dave's pretty much been forthcoming."
Lingering legal questions
Dave Minnick not only invited the detectives to check out his crop, he said he approached the Park County attorney before he got going so law enforcement wouldn't be alarmed. They were still alarmed, Minnick said. The county prosecutor first told Minnick to leave, then called in a deputy and asked the caregiver to stay once he realized Minnick wasn't joking.
Barnes isn't sure large grow operations were expected when the medical-marijuana initiative passed. It's one of many issues he thinks the law overlooked or ignored. Growers aren't required to keep records, and because state records are tightly guarded, it's difficult to determine if the marijuana is being grown for registered patients and if the amount of marijuana grown exceeds the limit of six plants per patient.
Barnes also has concerns about caregivers growing a small number of plants in homes where children are present. And he's not entirely convinced everyone registered for medical marijuana needs it. There is no age limit for legally using medical marijuana.
"One of the things that concerns me is that more people are moving here because they can have access to medical marijuana," Barnes said. "It's all over the state, not just here."
Patients and caregivers have concerns, too, said Tom Daubert, with Patients and Families United, an advocacy group for medical-marijuana users.
Working with law enforcement, Daubert and others are trying to work some of the kinks out of the state law. Patients and Families United would like to see some allowances for transportation by nonpatients. Patients too ill to travel now must rely on caregiver home delivery or courier, which poses problems because only patients and caregivers can possess the drug. Barnes and other detectives want more accountability written into the law.
One Missoula patient committed suicide last year after drug enforcement agents seized her marijuana because it was sent through United Parcel Service.
The group would also like to increase the amount of marijuana a patient is allowed to have on hand from an ounce, roughly a lunch bag full, to a larger amount. The group lobbied the 2007 Legislature to make the changes, but to no avail.
Federal officials would like to put the kibosh on medical marijuana, in part because they believe it undermines drug prevention programs such as the elementary school program Drug Abuse Resistance Education, or DARE.
"I don't have a lot of huge worries about it because I trust Americans to fix what they break, but I'm worried about the message we're sending to our kids. That's a tragedy," said Jeffrey Sweetin, special agent in charge of the Rocky Mountain Division of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency. "The kids that flunked DARE are now telling your kids, my kids, that this is medicine."
Marijuana is classified as a Schedule I narcotic, meaning that the federal government believes it has no useful purpose. Doctors can't prescribe the drug without breaking the law, they can only recommend it. Government agencies like the National Institutes of Health have argued for years that marijuana is damaging, Sweetin said. That argument was not heard in states where marijuana advocates have persuaded voters to allow medical marijuana.
"Please understand, we don't ignore marijuana grow operations," Sweetin said. "I assure you, there are thresholds at every U.S. attorney's office."
Not all doctors agree that marijuana is harmful. Ed Stickney, a retired physician in Billings, has written referrals for several patients. He said that particularly in pain cases, marijuana poses less of an addiction threat than powerful painkillers like OxyContin.
"I contend that if it were discovered today, marijuana would be considered a miracle drug," Stickney said.
makes me proud to live in this great state
 

simpsonsampson420

Well-Known Member
i live in a smaller town... the cops all have little dick napoleon syndrome... super conserative town needs super hero law enforcement to keep the streets clean... that type of shit... and honestly when i started gardening i was noided out... the only thing that kept me from sitting in my window looking out all day is knowing that the cops here are more concerned with meth labs and extacy labs than gardens... i still wouldnt grow next to a cop here.. let alone a cop with a K9 (even though the K9's here couldnt tell weed from actual grass)... but knowing the cops here arent gonna "waste their time" with a stoner who sits and plays video games all day helps me sleep at night.... maybe if your town has the type of problems my town has you'd be ok... and you'd be ok.. but the risk isnt worth it IMO.. the alternative is you can always offer to pay of the cop... slip him some of your stash here and there... maybe he'll even come help you.... but then again... maybe you should just follow your gut and wait until you dont live next door to one of your city's fine upstanding (possible corupt?? ::crosses fingers::) law enforcement agents...
 

Toker1505

Active Member
a cop lives directly accross the street from me. county sherriff. its suks, its spookey, but it ur a legal MJ patient who intends on making good on ur limits. i say fuck it why not. i just dont act stupid on my front porch. dont let retards come over to ur pad. spend most time w/ a girlfriend to imply "just doing the family thing" and i bet u be fine..........and of coarse take some smell pre cautions. Plus wouldnt it be fun grown all that stankey right under lil piggies nose?

What is your best advice for K-9's, I have a carbon filter going to the outside, I have it set to vent every hour on the hour for 15 min. I have a inside mini carbon filter recycling the air 24/7. I live in a city and cops busted my dealer last week, dealer knows that I have plants, I had to ask for seeds, I went to three different people and bought weed - not one bag had seeds! This is usely great, but I needed seeds and had to resort to asking for them. So I had to let him in my business a little, he thought I had sickly plants I prepared and didn't take care of them so he would see that I didn't have a green thumb, I had to show him, I told him I was planting outside come spring. All along I was building my grow space, and buying parts off line. I also bought veggies to throw anyone off who may look into my purchases. Now I am scared to death, but want to finish my grow. Check out my grow by clicking on my avatar. Anyone got any ideas?
 

Wordz

Well-Known Member
if you don't look like you're stoned off your ass all the time it would probably be pretty safe. How would he know what's going on in your house
 

demonic1

Well-Known Member
I say grow it and get to know the doggy. Put little cuttings around so he smells it all the time. Once in a while even feed him some. ;) Get him stoned and condition him to ignore MJ. They really shouldn't be training dogs to sniff that stuff anyway. There's far worse things than marijuana. However, after saying that..... the best trained dog I've ever seen was a cop dog. I was doing delieveries for a company and this one house, if you walked into the guys front lawn, the dog would start barking. Soon as you stepped back on the sidewalk, he'd stop. Nobody was home at the time but then someone told me it was a cop dog. I was so impressed by how well it was trained.
 

Johnnyorganic

Well-Known Member
if you don't look like you're stoned off your ass all the time it would probably be pretty safe. How would he know what's going on in your house
It's a dog. A dog can 'see' odor.

It's a trained police dog.

Might as well plant your garden in the flower beds in front of your house for all to see.
I say grow it and get to know the doggy. Put little cuttings around so he smells it all the time. Once in a while even feed him some. ;) Get him stoned and condition him to ignore MJ.
Monumentally bad idea.
 

Knally

Well-Known Member
You can train your own dog!!


[SIZE=+1]Narcotics/Explosives Detection Trainer Course[/SIZE][FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]This is a very generalized course outline for the 6-week Narcotics/Explosives Detection Trainer Course offered by Southern Police Canine, Inc. The actual course is specifically set up to run at the pace of the individual student(s).[/SIZE][/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1][/SIZE][/FONT]

[FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Prices include trainers course, food and lodging, and all necessary equipment to maintain canine.[/SIZE][/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1][/SIZE][/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Weeks 1 & 2:[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Introduction to Southern Police Canine, Inc.[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Training Philosophies[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Initial Review of Canine Material[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Selection Testing Process[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Drives and Instincts of Canines[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Theories of Proper Motivation[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Commands and Proper Usage[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Problem Solving[/SIZE][/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Weeks 3 & 4:[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Review of Past Weeks[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Understanding Scent Work[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Scent Discrimination[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Odor Introduction[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Narcotics/Explosives Detection Application[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]More Training Philosophies[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Problem Solving[/SIZE][/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Weeks 5 & 6:[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Review of Past Weeks[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Health Care/First Aid for Canines[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Legalities/Liabilities Regarding Canines[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Review of Examination Materials[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Practical Examination (Narcotics/Explosives)[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Written Examination (Narcotics/Explosives)[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Critique and Discussion[/SIZE][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]Graduation[/SIZE][/FONT]
 
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