Monday, May 19, 2008

Congratulations to the newest SUSAR Type I teams in the nation!











Please help me in congratulating People and Paws SAR team members; Geoff Gardiner & K9 Gretzky (WI-TF-K9 & IL-TF1), Deb Krsnich & K9 Jinx (WI-TF-K9), and Scott Peirson and K9 Alex (IL-TF1), as the newest State Urban Search and Rescue (SUSAR) Type I CE certified disaster canines.

This weekend People and Paws Search and Rescue sponsored and hosted a Type I test at our “Rubbletown Milwaukee” training facility, in conjunction with Wisconsin Task Force Canine, with teams representing WI-TF-K9, IL-TF1, NJ-TF1, FL-TF4. The evaluation was conducted by Teresa MacPherson (VA-TF1), who is the DHS/FEMA Canine sub-group Chair and lead canine evaluator for both the FEMA and SUSAR teams. She was assisted by Type I Evaluator Jennifer Massey (VA-TF1) with (2) Apprentice Evaluators from NJ-TF1 and (1) from MI-TF1.

The SUSAR Type I Canine Evaluation is identical to that of their FEMA counterparts, and between SUSAR and FEMA, only a small number of K9 teams and handlers nationwide have attained this level of certification. The difference between SUSAR and FEMA is that there are only 28 federally charted FEMA teams in the US&R system, SUSAR teams fill the void (or the additional need in several states with FEMA teams) at the state level. Many excellent teams will attain the Type II, but fall short of attaining the Type I. According to Teresa MacPherson, last year alone only 67% of the Type II teams that attempted the Type I passed. This weekend was also a bit historic in that the SUSAR Type I CE held this weekend by People and Paws SAR was only the second Type I CE to be held in the nation for SUSAR teams.

This is really an amazing accomplishment for Geoff, Deb, and Scott. The tremendous amount of time they have invested into their training and education to reach this coveted achievement has finally come to fruition by passing their Type I test on the first attempt for all.

5/18/08 Story on Fox 6 (Milwaukee)

Saturday, March 22, 2008

Wauwatosa officers create abduction response team

State's first team will expedite investigations of missing children
By JANICE KAYSERjkayser@cninow.com
Posted: March 19, 2008
http://www.wauwatosanow.com/story/index.aspx?id=729996

Detective Fred Carsky said that in his nearly 30 years with the Police Department, he recalls a handful of attempted child abductions in Wauwatosa.

Thankfully, observant witnesses intervened and thwarted what could have turned into the unspeakable, he said.

But just because such attempts are few and far between does not make Wauwatosa immune to such horrors.

Should it happen here, the Wauwatosa Police Department will have officers who have completed specialized training to help locate and return missing children.

Carsky and four other Wauwatosa detectives will be part of the state's first Child Abduction Response Team, it was announced this week.

"We hope we never have to use this training," said Carsky, who initiated the department's involvement. "But the reality is it can happen at any time. … The best thing we can do is be prepared to act swiftly and confidently using all available resources to bring the child home."
The team includes Carsky, Dan Collins, Dennis Davidson, David Hoppe and Lisa Hudson. They will be joined by investigators, victim witness specialists, Milwaukee County assistant district attorneys and a representative from People and Paws, a canine search-and-rescue team.

Funded through a U.S. Department of Justice program, training for the 12-member team will be administered by Fox Valley Technical College. After a week of training in April, the team will be deployed as needed throughout the Milwaukee County suburbs when a child is reported missing.
Differs from other crimes

A child abduction is very different than any other crime, and time is of the essence, Carsky said.
"We know how to handle robberies, assaults, burglaries," he said. "But a child abduction is a different animal."

Statistics from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children show that the majority of abducted children who are murdered are usually killed within the first three hours of the abduction.

The training will include how to best use federal and state resources, search-and-rescue teams and investigative strategies to act quickly within the first few hours of a missing child report.
Unlike the Amber Alert, which alerts law enforcement agencies, media and the public to a potential child abduction, there are no specific criteria to call a CART group.

To call an Amber Alert, a law enforcement agency must identify the situation as an abduction, the child must be believed to be in danger of great bodily harm and a description of the abductor or vehicle must be available. A CART group can be called anytime a child is reported missing.
At any given time, there are one to five Wauwatosa children listed as missing, according to police.
Most of those children are runaways or teens who failed to let parents know they went to a friend's home.

Expedites warrants, paperwork

David Budde, chief investigator with the district attorney's office, said the joint effort will be of great benefit.

Involving the district attorney's victim-witness specialists and prosecutors from the start will help expedite search warrants and complaints, a process that can take precious time to complete under regular circumstances, he said.

Debra Davidoski, director of victim witness services for the district attorney's office, said having a victim-witness advocate on the abduction response team frees up detectives to continue working on the case.

"When you have a child that has been abducted, you have a very limited time frame in which to work," she said. "This training will give us a better chance to recover that child more quickly and, hopefully, before they are harmed."

Janice Kayser can be reached at (262) 446-6608.

FYI

How did CART start?
The development of Child Abduction Response Teams started in Florida as a result of the 2004 abduction of an 11-year-old Sarasota girl.
Carlie Brucia's abduction was caught on videotape as she took a shortcut behind a car wash on her way home from a sleepover.
The video showed Carlie being led away by her abductor who assaulted and murdered her and left her body in a church parking lot.
The abductor's girlfriend tipped off police.
Joseph Smith, 37, a mechanic and father of three, was ultimately convicted of Brucia's murder and sentenced to death.
Since then, the CART training program has taken off, mostly in the south, and more teams have formed each year.

FYI

According to the U.S. Department of Justice:
• 797,500 children (younger than 18) were reported missing in a one-year period of time resulting in an average of 2,185 children being reported missing each day.
• 203,900 children were the victims of family abductions.
• 58,200 children were the victims of non-family abductions.
• 115 children were the victims of "stereotypical" kidnapping. These crimes involve someone the child does not know or a slight acquaintance who holds the child overnight, transports the child 50 miles or more, kills the child, demands ransom or intends to keep the child permanently.

Monday, December 3, 2007

2007 picture collage

Through out the year we gather numerous pictures of the team. This year we put some of them together to music for your viewing pleasure.

2007 Picture Collage

Thursday, November 22, 2007

Congratulations to the newest certified SUSAR Type II USAR K9 Team!


WI-TF-K9 and People & Paws Search & Rescue would like to congratulate the newest SUSAR Type II USAR K9 in the State! This past weekend Deb Krsnich and K9 Jinx successfully passed the SUSAR Type II disaster canine certification held by CTTF-1. Deb is now the second currently certified Type II USAR canine in the State of Wisconsin. Please join me in congratulating her on this tremendous accomplishment; she has worked long and very hard to attain this high level of proficiency.WAY TO GO DEB!!!!

Monday, November 19, 2007

Busy Weekend

It was a busy weekend with training both days. Saturday, the cadaver/HRD dogs worked a building that had been burnt to the ground by the Menomonee Falls Fire Department as a training exercise. They were gracious enough to allow us to deposit some items in the house before it was burned. There wasn't much left when they were done, but the dogs did a good job of locate the source.

Sunday it was off to water training. Who does water training in November when it is almost snowing out.. apparently we do ;-) The good news is the boat, side scan sonar, and underwater camera all worked perfectly.










Friday, November 16, 2007

New shipping/storage container







In order to be properly prepared for missing persons cases, disasters and water responses we have a lot of equipment. We were fortunate enough to acquire a 40ft shipping/storage container from Trudell Storage of Oak Creek. The crews from Stark Aphalt created a nice base for us at Rubbletown Milwaukee. With the assistance of several team members we painted the roof with waterproof and heat reflective paint, we installed vents, and painted the inside. We also have a steel door to install. It hasn't taken long and the container is rapidly filling up!



Here are some links to recent news about the team

www.milwaukeedoglovers.com

recently published an article on the team and SAR dogs. Here is a link to the article

Click Here

Bob Moore of Fox6 also was out recently to help us with fund raising. His video is

Here

Bob Moore was out after the tornadoes in Kansas to interview the team about their disaster capabilties.

Click Here

( Note: despite the title the team did not deploy any teams to Kansas)