More police K9s forced into retirement following legalization of recreational marijuana

Authored by kob.com and submitted by dukecitypeckerwood
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Here's the problem – a dog will indicate "a drug" is present, but can't communicate "which drug." A handler can't determine if the dog found meth, heroin or a legal amount of marijuana.

"Now marijuana is legal -- if the dog alerts on it, and we got a search warrant, we'd be violating somebody's rights. So that meant the easiest, simplest thing was to just stop using those dogs for that purpose," said Farmington Police Chief Steve Hebbe.

New Mexico State Police is also planning to retire all nine of its dogs that were trained to detect marijuana.

"Once the new canines are trained, the handlers will have the option of retiring their current assigned canine to their home, or we will look at other options to the likes of donating them to other law enforcement entities outside of the state of New Mexico who have yet to legalize marijuana," the department said in a statement.

One fiscal impact report estimates that replacing all nine dogs at state police would cost about $194,000.

RoutaOps on July 7th, 2021 at 10:56 UTC »

"How millenials are destroying the drug sniffing dog industry!"

manniesalado on July 7th, 2021 at 10:34 UTC »

They could sell them to people who are always forgetting where they stashed their weed.

Thisfoxtalks on July 7th, 2021 at 09:44 UTC »

"Now marijuana is legal -- if the dog alerts on it, and we got a search warrant, we'd be violating somebody's rights. So that meant the easiest, simplest thing was to just stop using those dogs for that purpose,"

Sounds good.