Grant County Sheriff’s Office K-9 receives body armor
SAM FLETCHER | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 4 years, 9 months AGO
Another local dog is protected thanks to a nonprofit on the east coast.
Grant County Sheriff’s Office K-9 Zedd’s bulletproof, knife-proof vest arrived in late February, courtesy of Vested Interest in K9s Inc., a Massachusetts nonprofit organization.
In addition to Vested Interest in K9s’s equipment grant for ballistic vests, the nonprofit also donated opioid reversal NARCAN kits, medical insurance, first aid kits and even vehicles custom fitted for K-9 units.
“It’s become a standing opportunity for us (when we) get new dogs, we would put in for a grant and so far we have not been turned down,” said GCSO Chief Deputy Ken Jones, overseer of the K-9 division. “The organization has just been fantastic.”
There are strict criteria for sending a K-9 out, Jones said, and it’s almost always dangerous. Because of this, statistically the dogs are put in a higher position of risk than the handler. For this reason, the office strives to equip them with the best gear available.
“Those vests have saved dogs from imminent death, being stabbed or, even worse, shot,” Jones said.
The vests are lightweight, flexible and adjustable, said founder Sandy Marcal, which is best for the dog.
The importance of the vests cannot be stressed enough, she said, and many of the departments she donates to don’t have the available budget to provide them.
“They do the same work as the officers so they need to have the same level of protection that their human counterpart has,” she said.
Zedd’s handler, GCSO Deputy Luis Jimenez, is the youngest on the fleet, Jones said.
“He’s doing a fantastic job with K-9 Zedd, and I’m very proud of all four handlers and how they’ve done business,” he said.
Zedd, like the other K-9s, is goal-driven and wants to do good, Jones said. The dogs are highly-trained, and it’s important to recognize their efforts as they are regularly put in high-risk situations.
In Phase 3, the sheriff’s office looks forward to going back into schools for presentations, Jones said, where they get the chance to show off the dogs.
Vested Interest has given donations to law enforcement departments across Washington in Seattle, Renton, Okanogan County, Grant County, Moses Lake, Soap Lake and elsewhere, said founder Sandy Marcal.
ARTICLES BY SAM FLETCHER
'It's refreshing': Summer Street on 3rd brings color to downtown Moses Lake
“We’re moving from recovery to (resilience),” said Downtown Moses Lake Association (DMLA) Executive Director Lexi Smith of post-shutdown Moses Lake.
Off to a fair start: Kiwanis Club hosts Cowboy Breakfast
MOSES LAKE — If the music, games and performances didn’t lure people to Sinkiuse Square Friday morning, it must have been the smell of waffles, syrup, sausage, eggs and coffee as the Kiwanis Club of Moses Lake kicked off the Grant County Fair with the Cowboy Breakfast.
Moses Lake to demolish some old structures
This year, the city of Moses Lake is cleaning up some rubble.