Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Standard Examiner on Nitro

 
K-9 rookie the biggest

By Loretta Park

Standard-Examiner Davis Bureau

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 10:30pm

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(ANTONY SOUFFLE/Standard-Examiner)
Bryson Westbrook, a deputy with the Davis County Sheriff's Office, holds back his new K-9 partner, Nitro, as fellow K-9 deputy Jeremy Varela gives him some advice during a training session Thursday at Fruit Heights City Hall.
(ANTONY SOUFFLE/Standard-Examiner)
Bryson Westbrook, a deputy with the Davis County Sheriff's Office, holds back his new K-9 partner, Nitro, as fellow K-9 deputy Jeremy Varela gives him some advice during a training session Thursday at Fruit Heights City Hall.
FARMINGTON -- Nitro may be the youngest member of the K-9 unit, but he's the biggest.
Nitro, a Belgian Malinois, joined the Davis County Sheriff's Office at the end of March. He weighs between 105 pounds and 110 pounds, while the other members of the sheriff's dog team are at least 25 pounds lighter.
But the 16-month-old dog is not overweight.
Nitro "has the best potential out of all of the dogs," said Davis County Sheriff's Deputy Jeremy Varela. "He's just unbelievable."
Nitro came to the sheriff's office from K9 Working Dogs International in Kansas. He cost about $12,500, and the funds came from two grants the county received.
Nitro recently received his narcotics certification. His handler, Davis County Sheriff's Deputy Bryson Westbrook, said he hopes to have Nitro patrol-certified soon, which means Nitro will be able to help apprehend suspects who either try to run from or attack officers.
Nitro, and the other four police dogs -- Jak, Mojo, Dax and Clyde -- train together once a week.
To the dogs, the officers who put on the suits or the protective arm gear are nothing more "than a big toy they get to bite," Varela said.
The once-a-week training allows the handlers to work together and give each other pointers to make their dog the best, but it also allows the dogs to work together.
In one session, Westbrook commanded Nitro to lay down, then told him to wait after Nitro saw Deputy Seth Dereta put on the protective arm gear.
"Suspect, do not move or my dog will bite you," Westbrook said.
At first, Dereta stood still while Westbrook searched him, but then Dereta ran. Nitro quickly took off at what looked like a gallop, then jumped at Dereta and knocked him down. He then clamped his jaws on the arm sleeve. After what looked like a tug-of-war game, Westbrook finally told Nitro to let go.
The dogs get training every day, whether at their homes or while at work, the deputies said. The training can involve something simple, like chasing a tennis ball, or sniffing out drugs in a car pulled over on Interstate 15.
With a simple command, Nitro's bark can sound as if he wants to rip a person apart, but at the same time, his tail may wag as if he's the happiest dog in town.
Almost as fast as Nitro begins to bark, he can stop barking at the command of Westbrook.
Westbrook, like Nitro, is a new member of the K-9 team. He joined the sheriff's office 2 1/2 years ago and said as he watched the other four dogs work, he decided he wanted to be a K-9 officer.
"I like getting drugs off the street, and it's so much easier with these dogs," Westbrook said.
Two weeks ago Nitro landed his first big drug bust.
Officers were called to a home where a suspected parole fugitive was staying. When they got inside the house, they noticed evidence of illegal narcotics on a table. The officers asked for a police dog, and Nitro came with Westbrook.
Nitro stopped at a bedroom door, which enabled the officers to get a search warrant.
Inside they found heroin, methamphetamine, pills, marijuana and bath salts, which landed the residents of the home in jail.
"I've learned to never doubt your dog," Westbrook said.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Moisture-laden soils slide in Beaver, Farmington

Published: Sunday, May 22, 2011 9:57 p.m. MDT
For flooding information, visit: Flood Watch 2011 from ksl.com
SALT LAKE CITY — Weekend slides forced the closure of at least three canyon roads over the weekend and emergency officials are bracing for more moving debris because of steady rain predicted Monday.
Rocks tumbled down the hillside Sunday in Davis County's Farmington Canyon, forcing the area to be shut down for at least 48 hours. This latest slide followed one up Santaquin Canyon and in Beaver Canyon, both closing roads until further notice.
In Beaver Canyon, two brothers on their way to a favorite fishing spot at 12:30 p.m. Sunday became unwitting witnesses to the aftermath of a tremendous amount of mud and debris that fell onto state Route 153.
The brothers, Shilo Joseph and James Joseph, captured the event on videotape using their cell phones.
"Approximately eight miles up the canyon, we were captivated to see the road covered in rocks, roots, branches, and mud. The destructive nature of the mud slide bathed the road in a natural mass of muck," Shilo Joseph said. "A boulder approximately the size of a wreaking ball was set directly in the center of the river along with a newly formed dam from the debris."
In Davis County, the sheriff's office reported the Farmington Canyon road closed for 48 hours due the instability of the hillsides. Rocks covered the road at the first switchback, but no injuries were reported in the 4:10 p.m. slide., despite an emergency services manager and a deputy being on scene when the rocks came down.
Kathy Jo Pollock with the Uinta-Cache-Wasatch National Forest said the Ward Canyon Road, (Forest Road No. 80177) in Davis County east of Bountiful has been closed due to slipping hillsides that have damaged the road. The closure begins at the forest service boundary and goes east to the junction with Skyline Drive (Forest Road No. 80008)
In Utah County, the 2 p.m. Saturday slide in Santaquin Canyon blocked more than a dozen motorists, happening just below the Tinney Flat Campground, Utah County Sheriff's Sgt. Spencer Cannon said. No one was injured and only one vehicle sustained some minor damage.
"It did cover the whole road," he said. "It was about 100 yards wide and three feet deep in places. There were a lot of trees and rocks, mud and water with it."
Cannon said the debris was solid enough that officials were able to get all of the vehicles past the obstruction before clearing the roadway
"The problem is, it fills back into place," he said. "We're figuring out how much material is going to come down and how long it will take to get it out of the way."

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DCSO Has a New Look

The Davis County Sheriff's Office is sporting a new look.  Our formerly all white fleet is in the process of switching over to a black fleet.  This will take place over several years, as we purchase new vehicles for the fleet, but our first five vehicles are in and they look sharp!

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Safe Kids F.I.T. Fair

Davis County Sheriff's Command Post helped out with Child ID kits, lost children, first aid and general information.

Davis County Sheriff's Search and Rescue were called out to help rescue an injured person who was bucked off a horse, but they returned and gave a demonstration on their Hovercraft.

DCSO and Clinton DARE showed off their cars and helped with Child ID kits.

Davis County Sheriff's K9 Unit did demonstrations for audiences on drug work, and bite work.  Deputy Dereta takes a bite from Jak and Nitro at the same time.
Deputy Westbrook and Jak, enjoying the sunshine.

Deputy Seth Dereta taking two bites in one, Jak and Nitro.

Deputy Bryson Westbrook running for his life.

Deputy Westbrook still enjoying his day out on the lawn, with Jak.

Mojo showing the kids how he finds drugs hidden in a vehicle.

Dax finding hidden drugs for the crowd. 

K9 Dax going after Deputy Westbrook.

Deputy Cory Cox taking two bites in one from Jak and Nitro.  Deputy Cox was off duty, just enjoying the day with his family and somehow he got roped into this. 

Run Bryson, run!

Deputy Westbrook giving K9 Dax a ride on his arm.  What a great day to go to the park!

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Davis County Sheriff Conducts DUI Checkpoint

The Davis County Sheriff's Office conducted a DUI checkpoint on Friday, May 6, 2011 in Fruit Heights.  The checkpoint was in cooperation with multiple other agencies.  The checkpoint yielded:
  • 10 DUI's
  • 9 Drug-related arrests
  • 3 Open containers of alcohol
  • 1 Warrant arrest






On Davis sheriff plans Friday checkpointBy Standard-Examiner staff

Tuesday, May 17, 2011



Scouts return to safety after losing hiking trail
May 15th, 2011 @ 12:58pm
By ksl.com
BOUNTIFUL  – Six Boy Scouts and their leaders, lost while hiking Saturday, were able to walk safely out of North Canyon around midnight, the Davis County Sheriff's office said.

The scouts called Davis County dispatch for help after losing the trail through the canyon from Elephant Rock because of snow, Davis County Sheriff's Sgt. Susan Poulsen said Sunday.

"It sounds like it was mostly bad luck due to the snowpack. I'm not sure that anyone is really aware of how much snow we have up in the mountains right now," Poulsen told KSL NewsRadio. "The trail was snowed over."

"It sounds like it was mostly bad luck due to the snowpack. I'm not sure that anyone is really aware of how much snow we have up in the mountains right now. The trail was snowed over." -Susan Poulsen

She said a search and rescue team and a helicopter were brought in to help locate the scouts, who had been following a creek. When they were spotted, the helicopter dropped off several people to help the scouts prepare to stay the night.

That turned out not to be necessary when the search and rescue reached them about 11 p.m. and determined the scouts were able to walk out of the canyon.

No one was injured, Poulsen said, just cold and wet.

She noted the scouts and their leaders were well prepared for the hike, equipped with cell phones and a GPS device as well as food and water. Poulsen urged all hikers to take similar precautions and to be especially careful given the current snowpack levels.

"We would like to make sure the public is aware to just be extra cautious this year. There will be heavy running water and many other challenges with the snow," Poulsen said in the radio interview. "And it can present problems with avalanches and other dangers that maybe we're not real familiar with at this time of year."

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Davis County Officer Memorial

2011 Peace Officer Memorial

Posted Monday, May 16th, 2011
On Friday, May 13, 2011, the Davis County Sheriff's Office held a Law Enforcement Peace Officer Memorial service in honor of fallen officers affected by line of duty death. The ceremony opened with the pledge of allegiance followed by remarks from Sheriff Todd Richardson. The guest speaker was Davis County Fraternal Order of Police President Dave Edwards from the Bountiful Police Department.
The program also included the song "Hero" from Deputy Jessica Slagowski, honor guard and flag ceremony by the Davis County Multi-Agency Honor Guard, and taps played by Kelsey Hoffman of Davis High School and Paul Kapp a Davis County citizen. The Galloway Highlanders bagpipers played "Amazing Grace" prior to the 21 gun salute.

May 14 marked 40 years since the death of Deputy Sheriff Donald Perry Jensen. Deputy Jensen is the only Deputy Sheriff in the history of the Davis County Sheriff's Office that died in the line of duty.
Olive Jensen Lenox yearly attends the memorial in honor of her deceased husband.




Memorial service honors fallen officers

By Loretta Park

Standard-Examiner Davis Bureau

Fri, 05/13/2011 - 11:12pm

FARMINGTON -- Flags across the state will fly at half staff Sunday to honor fallen law enforcement officers as part of National Police Week.
Gov. Gary Herbert ordered that the U.S. and state flags be lowered following an executive order from President Barack Obama.
On Friday, Davis County law enforcement officers and family members of fallen officers attended a memorial service that included a 21-gun salute and music in front of the Davis County Sheriff's Office.
One of those in attendance was Olive Lenox, 81, of Farmington. She is the widow of Davis County Sheriff's Deputy Donald Perry Jensen, who was shot to death May 14, 1971.
"He was murdered," Lenox said.
Lenox was 41 at the time of her husband's death; their three children were 19, 11 and 9.
Jensen believed he was helping two stranded motorists. Instead, the motorists turned out to be robbery suspects from Ogden.
They shot Jensen five times with a .38-caliber handgun and then with a .22 magnum pistol. The two were captured in Wyoming, served prison time and were released on parole, according to a website honoring Jensen.
His name is engraved on the memorial at the base of the flagpole at the Davis County Sheriff's Office in Farmington.
Three others are alongside: Utah Highway Patrol Trooper George Dee Rees, who died July 2, 1970; UHP Lt. Thomas Sumner Retberg, who died Feb. 11, 2000; and North Salt Lake Officer Charles Benjamin Skinner, who died Nov. 8, 2008.
Skinner's father-in-law, Bountiful Police Sgt. Gary Koehn, said Skinner was only 30 and had been a police officer for six months when he died after crashing his car during a high-speed chase.
Koehn's daughter, Kaitlyn Skinner, left Thursday to honor her husband at the national memorial service in Washington, D.C.
"I like the fact (Skinner) is remembered every year," Koehn said.
He said it's been hard the past three years.
"I think about (the accident) all the time," Koehn said. "Something will remind me about the events of that day or night."
He said he is now more aware when other police officers across the state die and that he has attended every funeral. The death of officers and the support other officers give to loved ones "has hit a little bit closer to home," Koehn said.
Bountiful Police Cpl. Dave Edwards, president of the Davis County Fraternal Order of Police, spoke at the service.
He challenged area residents to "reach out and serve the community" and also challenged police officers to "serve with passion and with the warrior spirit."
Davis County Sheriff Todd Richardson said law enforcement officers make the commitment to serve the community to make it better. 
"Times are not getting better, but harder for our officers and our families."



Monday, May 2, 2011

Standard.net

Davis residents get ready, get set for disaster

By Dana Rimington

Standard-Examiner correspondent

Sat, 04/30/2011 - 7:43pm

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(KRISTIN HEINICHEN/Standard-Examiner) 
Deputy Seth Dereta, left, holds onto Mojo, a Dutch shepherd used in the K9 Unit for Davis County, as Brandon Roundy, a K9 Deputy with Davis County, acts as a perpetrator, during a Preparedness Fair in Fruit Heights on Saturday.
(KRISTIN HEINICHEN/Standard-Examiner) 
Deputy Seth Dereta, left, holds onto Mojo, a Dutch shepherd used in the K9 Unit for Davis County, as Brandon Roundy, a K9 Deputy with Davis County, acts as a perpetrator, during a Preparedness Fair in Fruit Heights on Saturday.
(KRISTIN HEINICHEN/Standard-Examiner) 
Reverend Neal Edwards, of the Venturing Crew 519, demonstrates how to prepare food without electricity during a Preparedness Fair in Fruit Heights on Saturday.
(KRISTIN HEINICHEN/Standard-Examiner) 
Children browse the exhibits during a Preparedness Fair in Fruit Heights on Saturday.
FRUIT HEIGHTS -- With intermittent snow flurries Saturday, the weather wasn't ideal for an emergency-preparedness fair, but natural disasters don't always come at convenient times.
The question of the day at the fair, with hundreds of people perusing more than 40 booths, was: How prepared are you for an emergency?
Cody and Peggy Huft, of Fruit Heights, attended so they could find additional ways to be prepared.
"We've been preparing at home because, with the way things are going with the government, if they toppled and everything goes, we'll be prepared, I hope," Cody Huft said.
His wife agreed, saying it's hard to get everything upfront.
"We are taking it just one step at a time and plan on getting a little each month so it doesn't get too expensive," she said.
One of the more popular booths at the event was the Dutch-oven table hosted by the Venturing Scouts at Westminster Presbyterian Church of Fruit Heights, headed by the Rev. Neal Humphrey.
The Scouts were offering free samples of chili, pizza and bread, hot and right out of the Dutch ovens.
The food was a definite hit in the cold weather.
"In an emergency, kids need pizza, and that is why you need a Dutch oven," Humphrey said.
The cast-iron pots are a good resource because they can be used with many sources of heat, including briquettes, oven, fire or propane.
Fruit Heights Mayor Todd Stevenson is optimistic when it comes to evaluating his city's readiness to handle an emergency.
"We are in really good shape with our community and the city emergency plan, but we can't take care of everybody, so this is good to help individuals get prepared," he said.
Because it may take several days before professional help can reach people hit by a disaster, residents need to be prepared with enough food, water and other supplies to last for a few days.
"In major disasters, we are going to need to depend on our neighbors since it may be 72 hours before professional help can come," said Fruit Heights City Councilwoman Bette Hubrich.
"I want citizens to walk away from this event with heightened awareness of their personal need to be prepared for any situation that should arise, instead of thinking someone will come in to help."
Fruit Heights plans to start holding monthly preparedness meetings to help people evaluate their readiness.
The first class will begin at 7 p.m. May 19 at the Fruit Heights City Building, 910 S. Mountain Road. For more information, email bhubrich@fruitheightscity.com.
The preparedness fair was jointly sponsored by the cities of Fruit Heights, Farmington and Kaysville.

Mojo Sniffs DCSO into Drug Arrests

On April 19, 2011, a Davis County K9 was requested for a K9 sniff at a home in Sunset.  Mojo conducted a K9 sniff and he had a positive indication for illegal drugs.  Deputies obtained a search warrant for the home, which resulted in the arrests of the following two individuals:

Merry Elizabeth Graham
Arrested for possession of methamphetamine,
marijuana and paraphernalia in a drug-free zone. 




Andrew Allen Huffman
Arrested for possession of methamphetamine,
marijuana and paraphernalia, all
enhanced for it being in a
drug-free zone