Related categories:  Tactical Products
Need Advice Buying Police Body Armor?

Police Body Armor
 

Sponsored by

U.S. Armor
 
Protective Products International
 
First Choice Armor
 
American Body Armor
 
Armor Express
 
Second Chance Armor
 
Safariland®
 
Survival Armor
 
Blackhawk!
 
Galls
 

Body Armor Companies

American Body Armor
Armored Solutions®, Inc.
DGG Taser and Tactical Supply
Diamondback Tactical
First Choice Armor and Equipment
Protective Products Intl.
Safariland Armorwear
Second Chance
Security Pro USA
U.S. Armor
Body Armor Company Directory List Your Company

Police Body Armor Feature

5.11 Tactical Ballistic Vest from First Choice

New Products

More New Products

Featured Product Categories

Firearms Training Services Personal Transportation Vehicles Laser Sights Emergency Response Software View All Categories

Police Body Armor Grants

P.A.C.A. Tactical Armor Grant for SWAT/Tactical Teams
Free Body Armor Program, National We Care Foundation
More Grants


Police Body Armor Article

March 07, 2008

PrintTalk BackRegisterWhat's This

Utah K-9s get bulletproof vests

By Jacob Hancock
The Deseret Morning News

LINDON, Utah — Utah County police dogs showed off their attack and search skills to a small crowd of kennel club members in Lindon on Thursday night, sporting their new bulletproof attire.

Officers held an appreciation ceremony thanking the 35-member Utah Valley Kennel Club, which teamed up with its sister organization, Intermountain Kennel Club, to purchase the two vests for Salt Lake and Utah County K-9 teams.

Human officers sport one-size-fits-all kind of vests that cost the department between $500 and $600. But the Belgium Malinois K-9s are specialty fitted with tailored vests that run about $2,200.

The vests don't cover very much of a policeman's four-legged partner, but they're apparently enough to guard its vital organs during a shootout. Such an event happened in Utah County just over a year ago.

"He (the K-9) was shot clean through his leg," said Sgt. Lane Critser. "But that didn't keep him from his attack. We only found the wound later when we did a nose-to-tail inspection."

The inch thick, layered vests, which wrap around the dog "like a burrito," weigh about five pounds and are equipped with harnessing d-rings designed for rapelling.

Utah County has seven dogs that are trained and assigned into specialized groups of duty: major crimes, patrol and the bomb squad.

Eight-year-old Veto, a $7,000 "sniffing tool," impressed the dog-loving crowd Thursday by detecting a mock stash of marijuana. A Major Crimes Task Force undercover officer was quick to mention the K-9 can sniff out the real stuff just as well.

"Just two weeks ago, the dog sniffed out a stash of marijuana that had been stuffed up a stuffed teddy bear's rear end," the officer said. "We would never have found that."

The toy's "guts" had an estimated street value of about $25,000 — a relatively small figure compared to a recent $2 million, 500-pound marijuana sniff-bust.

"It's reasons like that that make these dogs so important to our operation," said Critser. "And that's why these vests are valuable to us."

Copyright 2008 Deseret Morning News



LexisNexis Copyright © 2008 LexisNexis, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.    Terms and Conditions Privacy Policy

PrintTalk BackRegisterWhat's This






Back to previous page




© Copyright 2008 - PoliceOne.com