Tragic trend of police dogs dying in hot patrol cars continues


Posted on Aug 19, 2008 By Julia Szabo
As reported in the San Diego Union-Tribune, a San Diego police offer was charged Friday in the death of his K9 partner, a 5-year-old Belgian Malinois named Forrest. Officer Paul Hubka, a 22-year veteran of the San Diego police department, left the dog in the police cruiser with the windows rolled up on a day when temperatures exceeded 100 degrees.The attorney representing Hubka in an unrelated labor lawsuit said the officer had worked a double shift and was exhausted when he got home, forgetting the dog was in the car.
 
In a tragic trend, as reported in Nose to the Ground last month, Police officer Sara Movahedi left her K9 partner Sam Diesel, a German Shepherd dog, in the patrol car with the air conditioner running. Unbeknownst to the officer, the car's recently-installed new air compressor had failed, shutting down the air conditioner. Three and a half hours later, Movahedi returned to discover Sam Diesel's lifeless body in the back.
 
Last summer, police Sgt. Tom Lovejoy of suburban Phoenix left his police dog in a patrol car for 13 hours. The dog died, but the officer was ultimately acquitted of animal cruelty on Friday. Lovejoy testified that after working an overnight shift, he parked his police SUV in his driveway and went inside, forgetting his K9 partner, another Belgian Malinois, was inside, sleeping in the back.
 
The San Diego police department has announced that it plans to buy heat-alert systems for its fleet of 53 police dog cars similar to those used in other cities, such as Phoenix, Dallas, and Las Vegas, where temperatures reach dangerous highs. When the back seat of the patrol car reaches a certain temperature, the system will automatically lower the car's windows, switch on the air conditioning, and sound an alarm. The technology will cost about $36,000 total.
 
In the meantime, overtired police officers - and any motorist traveling with a dog in the car - would be well advised to make a habit of always checking the car interior thoroughly for sleeping dogs, and removing any animal from the vehicle before locking up.
 
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