Assaults on officers are increasing, and communities across the country are facing calls to “defund the police.” Beat cops routinely face catcalls — and a wall of cellphone cameras set to “record” — when carrying out daily duties.
Lt. Janna Salisbury, who heads New York’s Employee Assistance Unit, said the dogs and their handlers “will respond to critical incidents involving on- and off-duty members of the department . . . breaking down traditional mental health barriers, reducing stigmas that often prevent officers from seeking care.”
Law enforcement agencies across the country increasingly are turning to emotional support dogs — a departure from K-9 programs where animals search for drugs, weapons and explosives, control crowds, or track down missing people.
In the month after Jan. 6, four police therapy dogs from two Northern Virginia departments — Fairfax and Arlington counties — spent time with U.S. Capitol Police officers and National Guard soldiers, said Allison Cutright, who runs the Fredericksburg, Va.-based FRK9 that trained those dogs. She estimated that dozens of departments have launched K-9 programs in recent years.
“Law enforcement officers go to work every day and do a job most people wouldn’t do for a million bucks,” said Patrick Yoes, national president of the Fraternal Order of Police, describing how officers on patrol have been villainized over the past 18 months. “To have people turn on us the way that they did . . . I think it took a toll on every officer.”
An unusual pairing
A program called Puppies Behind Bars is responsible for bringing Jenny and Piper to New York’s Employee Assistance Unit. To learn how to handle dogs, four EAU officers recently spent two weeks embedded at the Bedford Hills Correctional Center, a maximum security women’s prison in Westchester County, where inmates raise puppies to become therapy and service animals.
Tiffany Richway, 29, is serving an 11-year sentence on a high-level drug conviction in a remote upstate county, near the Canadian border. Richway said the K-9 program has given her purpose as she works through her sentence.
“It makes prison so much easier,” she said. “It gives you something to wake up for.”
Richway said she and her colleagues in the program only recently began training therapy dogs for use in police departments. They were already training dogs for other jobs, including to comfort veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD.
At the prison, the NYPD officers were paired with inmates who trained them to become Jenny and Piper’s handlers and backup handlers. The pairing of convict coaches and officers was odd at first, according to some of those who participated. But they quickly saw the importance of their common purpose.
“It is our intention to bring techniques like this to cops in crisis, to smash through the wall that stigma behind mental health has built, to get officers to open up in situations where they might not normally open up, including thoughts of suicide,” Manza said.
In Fairfax County, three police dogs make several rounds of random check-ins with officers each week, while also responding to critical incidents and any situation that may be difficult for officers, said Lt. Christopher Sharp, who commands the Incident Support Services unit.
Yoes, the national FOP president, said police therapy dogs are “sorely needed,” especially if used in a way that keeps officers from feeling like they will face reprisal for seeking help or counseling. The dogs, he said, are skilled at getting big “manly” cops to “sit on the floor and play with them.”
Trauma both physical and mental
Blue H.E.L.P., an organization devoted to promoting mental health for law enforcement, says at least 89 officers have died by suicide so far this year. That is compared with 239 law enforcement suicides in 2019 — the year 10 New York officers took their own lives — 174 in 2020 and 182 in 2018.
Attacks on officers across the country are on the rise, according to statistics compiled by the FOP, with 185 officers shot, including 35 killed, through July. The organization said ambush-style attacks are up 126 percent from last year, with 67 officers shot in 52 incidents. Earlier this month, two Chicago officers were shot, one fatally, during a traffic stop.
Betsy Brantner Smith, a retired police sergeant and longtime dog owner who worked in suburban Chicago, used to supervise her agency’s K-9 unit.
While she was on the job, her pets were always a source of comfort. In her recent eight-month stint of treatment for breast cancer, her pair of terrier mixes were a loving presence that helped her get through.
“That’s one of the reasons I so strongly believe in these programs — is because I have seen with my own personal experiences what dogs mean to people, [and] what dogs have meant to our family,” Smith said.