news Meet Cezar and Ghost: Gulfport Police Department Welcomes K-9s
By Abby Baker
ABBY BAKER
âK-9 units tend to push crime out of the area, just on sight, and Gulfport is an area with a lot of crime of opportunity,â Janovich said. âEven just seeing the K-9 vehicles will deter people.â
Weighing in at 70 pounds each with a total price tag of $19,000, two police dogs will make up the new Gulfport Police Department K-9 Unit. Gulfport Police Officers David Janovich and Richard Bynum received their German Shepherds, Cezar, 19 months old and Ghost, 17 months old, in January. At the moment, these animals are a couple of family dogs. Starting February 15, however, both officers and dogs will attend Pinellas County Sheriffâs Office K-9 Compound for a four-month patrol school where the dogs will master the art of human scent detection and learn to respond to a series of commands. âThe idea is, they want to work,â Bynum said. âWe have to trust them and they trust us.â Itâs been more than 30 years since a Gulfport Police Officer worked in a K-9 team, and with two experienced handlers, the city decided to give the unit a green light. âThe main hang up that the chief had was that he wanted to make sure he had officers who knew how to work
with the dogs effectively,â Janovich said. Janovich, who is Cezarâs handler, was a police dog handler for the Pinellas Park Police Department. Bynum, Ghostâs handler, worked alongside bomb dogs in the Marine Corps during his deployment in Iraq and Afghanistan. âDogs are responsive; theyâre on the scene fast,â Bynum said. âYou really learn how to read their body language quickly.â The Price Tag The cost of the Gulfport Police Departmentâs two-dog K-9 unit, equipped with two animal-outfitted vehicles, is $65,000 in start up fees. This includes the canines, ringing up at $9,500 each, veterinary needs and equipment, including used K-9 unit SUVs at $6,500 per vehicle. The SUVs are equipped with a âdoor popperâ feature that allows the officers to let the canines out of the back of the car from a button on a remote they carry with them, inside or outside the vehicle. There are also cooling features to
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allow for the dogs to be in the back of the SUV despite the Florida heat. âOur agency was due for new vehicles anyway,â Janovich said. âThis is going to help us in the long run, with crime but also for community engagement.â Not every Gulfportian agrees. Ward I Councilmember April Thanos had concerns about this police addition when Gulfport City Council discussed it in August 2020. âItâs not that Iâm opposed to having a K-9 unit, or dogs in general,â Thanos said. âItâs just that in the time of COVID-19 we should be conserving money.â Thanos voted ânoâ on the $65,000 K-9 unit during the 2020-2021 budget vote; council approved the unit, fourto-one. âThis is just a PR thing,â Thanos said. âWe could have spent the money on body cameras or a new roof for the fire department.â The two K-9 teams will be out in the field by June 10, following graduation from patrol school. âI know the public is going to love them,â Janovich said.
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