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-Lurid Crime Tales-
Police Cluster
2010-02-02
The South Bend Police Department is investigating whether officers behaved appropriately during a chase of a car theft suspect Sunday, a department official said.

Some police at the scene allege Cpl. Scott Ross mishandled his canine and scuffled with Cpl. Joshua Morgan after Morgan tried to shoot the dog, South Bend police spokesman Capt. Phil Trent confirmed.

"We're investigating what led to a shot (allegedly) being fired by an officer, what was the aftermath, and were all policies and procedures followed correctly," Trent said.

According to a police report, Morgan began chasing a teenager driving a stolen Oldsmobile about 3:45 p.m. Sunday.

Morgan chased the vehicle for about 3 miles before the driver crashed the car and began running away at the corner of Camden Street and Western Avenue, the report said. Morgan followed on foot.

The department is investigating what happened next.

Trent confirmed some officers at the scene have alleged the following occurred:

As Morgan was chasing the suspect, another officer, Cpl. Scott Ross, released his canine partner to help the chase. For reasons that are not clear, the canine went after Morgan instead and attempted to bite him.

Morgan then fired at the canine, apparently in self-defense, but missed. He continued the pursuit as more officers arrived to help. Officers caught the suspect in the back yard of a house in the 400 block of Liberty Street.

Meanwhile, Ross and Morgan began "swinging at each other" in the backyard after Ross became angry that Morgan shot at his dog. As the dispute between Ross and Morgan continued, the canine began biting officers who were trying to arrest the suspect.

The canine bit Cpl. Dominic Hall on the left leg and then attacked Ptl. Jamil Elwaer on his upper left thigh, pinning him on the ground. Other officers eventually pulled the dog off of Elwaer and separated Morgan and Ross.

The department is still gathering information about the incident, Trent said.
Posted by: Anonymoose

#6  Use a knife. The dog's mouth is already frozen in place due to it holding onto you and the throat is there so why not use what's offered.

Knife is also silent so the bad guy can't tell what's going on and react to it.
Posted by: Canuckistan sniper   2010-02-02 13:37  

#5  That dog sounds like a menace. Too bad the shot missed. I recommend more range time for officer Morgan.
Posted by: Scooter McGruder   2010-02-02 12:32  

#4  Maybe the dog knows more about these particular cops than we do. Low scores for everyone in the Works And Plays Well With Others.
Posted by: SteveS   2010-02-02 08:33  

#3  Could be the handler is at fault or that the dog needs more training.

However, Morgan should have assumed that this dog, like other police dogs, was trained to hold but not harm if he didn't struggle. Hold but not harm is deeply, deeply ingrained during training - a first lesson and one that is reinforced continually and that operates at the instinctual vs. command level. Shooting the dog was way out of bounds, assuming he hadn't gone for the officer's throat.

A mess on several fronts it would appear.
Posted by: lotp   2010-02-02 08:24  

#2  Reality intrudes...
From Columbine to the Iranian hostage rescue, forces that have not worked together in simulated event training will be poorly coordinated and a greater risk to the operation that the perp.
Posted by: Skidmark   2010-02-02 07:51  

#1  It looks like the dog needs more training or removal from duty. Perhaps the handler as well.
Posted by: tipover   2010-02-02 01:40  

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