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News (Media Awareness Project) - New Zealand: Travellers Asked To Help Train Drug Dogs
Title:New Zealand: Travellers Asked To Help Train Drug Dogs
Published On:2001-10-13
Source:New Zealand Herald (New Zealand)
Fetched On:2008-01-25 06:48:43
TRAVELLERS ASKED TO HELP TRAIN DRUG DOGS

Passengers at Auckland Airport are being given traces of drugs to put in
their pockets and told it is to help to train sniffer dogs.

The dog training is part of a Customs Service push to crack down on
white-powder drugs that has led to a big increase in interceptions in the
past year.

But the "live" training exercises involving passengers worry the Auckland
District Law Society, which wants the service to use its own staff or
independent, paid volunteers.

The drug dog unit's team leader, Cliff Russell, says passengers are used to
make conditions as realistic as possible for the dogs.

The team randomly chooses passengers who are not considered a risk.

Mr Russell says officers try to use adults but do not ask a passenger's
age. Most are happy to cooperate.

Once a person agrees to take part, a piece of card or paper is placed in
his or her pockets.

The card or paper has previously been kept in a jar containing drugs such
as Ecstasy and cocaine for a week or more, and the odour from the drugs is
absorbed by the card.

The person is then asked to walk though a Customs-controlled area where the
dog on duty is supposed to detect the odour.

Mr Russell says tests show that the odour lasts only about an hour outside
the jar.

A woman whose 17-year-old son agreed in July to help Customs with the test
says she was concerned when she heard about it.

Erin Foster, a US-based New Zealander, says she has travelled extensively
throughout the world and has never seen such a practice.

She has always told her children never to speak to people at airports or
take anything from them, even if they are in uniform.

Erin Foster says she is concerned that the smell of the drugs might have
lingered on her son's clothing and got him into trouble for future travel.

Law Society spokesman Gary Gotlieb says it is a "bit cheeky" of Customs to
ask passengers to take part in dog training when the service could easily
use its own people.

He says he would not personally agree to such a request. The smell of drugs
could permeate clothing and cause problems at other ports.

Customs says white-powder drug interceptions have jumped significantly
since it started training the dogs a couple of years ago.

In the year to June 30, 500 drug interceptions occurred at air and marine
ports and mail centres throughout the country, up 100 on the previous year.

Of those, 47 involved white-powder drugs, a jump of 70 per cent on the
previous two years.

The dogs can now detect drugs such as Ecstasy, methamphetamine (speed) and
even LSD, which were previously thought not to give off an odour. Cannabis,
which gives off a strong smell, has previously been the main target of drug
dogs.

The head of the Auckland police drug squad, Detective Senior Sergeant Colin
McMurtrie, says Ecstasy and speed are taking over as the drugs of choice in
New Zealand.

Almost all Ecstasy is imported, while most speed is produced here.
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