Current:Home > InvestAnother police dog dies while trying to help officers arrest a suspect in South Carolina -Insightful Finance Hub
Another police dog dies while trying to help officers arrest a suspect in South Carolina
View
Date:2025-04-13 17:10:12
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — For the second time this month, a police dog has been killed while trying to help arrest a suspect in South Carolina.
A Richland County Sheriff’s Department dog named Wick was struck and killed by a car on Interstate 77 early Thursday when his leash broke and he chased a suspect who ran across the highway, Sheriff Leon Lott said.
Deputies had been chasing the suspect after discovering him driving a stolen car. He ran after officers flattened his tires using stop sticks, Lott said.
Investigators are still looking for the suspect, the sheriff said.
Wick was a 3-year-old Belgian Malinois and had worked with the sheriff’s department for over a year.
Wick’s body was draped in an American flag and dozens of officers saluted as he was taken from an emergency vet to a funeral home in a procession Thursday morning.
At least six states, including South Carolina, had bills in their legislatures this year with stiffer penalties for hurting or killing police dogs, although critics of the proposals point out a long history of harassment involving police dogs in marginalized communities and serious dog-bite injuries during arrests.
Wick’s death came just nine days after investigators said a State Law Enforcement Division police dog, Coba, was shot and killed as officers tried to arrest a suspect wanted for burglary in a Newberry County home.
The suspect in the shooting was then wounded by officers, authorities said.
State agents held a memorial service for Coba on Wednesday.
Last September, another dog, Rico, was shot and killed on Johns Island by a hiding suspect wanted for randomly shooting at people at responding police officers the day before, investigators said.
Police dogs become part of their handlers’ families and the law enforcement family. Their willingness to risk their lives so human officers can avoid threats deserves high commendation, said State Law Enforcement Division Chief Mark Keel, whose voice broke with emotion several times as he spoke about Coba on Wednesday.
“These K-9s are fearless. And we in law enforcement introduce them and we deploy them into very dangerous situations. We deploy them into dark rooms and homes where we know people are hiding,” Keel said.
Bagpipes played as the memorial service began. Gov. Henry McMaster was there to pay his respects, as he did at a service for Rico last October.
Photos of Coba were shown on a screen as soft music played — the dog in a shopping cart, selfies with his handler agent Cole Powell, training shots as he attacked a heavily padded suspect, and a final snapshot of Powell on a knee, head bowed and his arm gently resting on Coba’s body, draped with an American flag.
Powell said he was thankful for Coba’s sacrifice and that his memories of the dog will last forever.
Police dogs become part of the fabric of a law enforcement team, Lt. Keith Thrower, who oversees the state agency’s dog tracking team, said Wednesday.
“When he entered that house, Coba put himself between us and evil,” Thrower said. ”Evil didn’t win that day because Coba was there to protect his teammates.”
veryGood! (63355)
Related
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- A magnitude 4.1 earthquake shakes a wide area of Southern California, no injuries reported
- Stanley cups have people flooding stores and buying out shops. What made them so popular?
- Christopher Nolan recalls Peloton instructor's harsh 'Tenet' review: 'What was going on?'
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Belarus’ authoritarian leader tightens control over the country’s religious groups
- Natalia Grace’s Adoptive Mom Kristine Barnett Breaks Her Silence on Explosive Docuseries
- A town's golden weathervane mysteriously vanished in 1999. The thief was just identified after he used his credit card to mail it back.
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- NBA trade deadline buyers and sellers include Lakers, Pistons
Ranking
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- After 16-year restoration, Greece unveils palace where Alexander the Great became king
- B-1 bomber crashed during training mission in South Dakota; aircrew members ejected safely
- NYC subway train derailment: What we known about the collision that left dozens injured
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- David Soul, the actor who portrayed the blond half of TV’s ‘Starsky and Hutch,’ dies at 80
- The Excerpt podcast: Police say 6th-grader killed, 5 injured in Iowa school shooting
- Agencies release plans for moving hotel-dwelling Maui fire survivors into long-term housing
Recommendation
Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
Michigan lottery group won $150,000 after a night out in the bar
Fight at Philadelphia train station ends with man being fatally struck by train
Nikola Jokic delivers knockout blow to Steph Curry and the Warriors with epic buzzer beater
'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
61-year-old with schizophrenia still missing three weeks after St. Louis nursing home shut down
Hezbollah leader says his group must retaliate for suspected Israeli strike in Beirut
Azerbaijan names a former oil exec to lead climate talks. Activists have concerns