|
ROTTWEILERS are set to replace Alsatians as the
first choice for Scottish police forces who believe the ferocious reputation of
the ‘devil dogs’ will be a bonus in the fight against crime.
Excessive inbreeding among German shepherd dogs
has led to many becoming too timid to intimidate suspects, and to widespread
problems with their physique.
But now a young Rottweiler is being bred as the
first of what the police hope will be many to join Scottish forces, despite the
dog’s poor reputation among the public following a string of savage attacks,
often involving children.
Two-year-old ‘Mac’ is among the star pupils in
his training class and it is expected that he will be on patrol by the end of
the month.
Rottweilers could eventually become more widely
used than German shepherds. The traditional police dog has been specifically
bred for shows such as Crufts for so long that police forces are now having
trouble finding suitable candidates.
But the ferocious reputation of the Rottweiler
will ensure its mere presence will have a significant effect when dealing with
crowd trouble or persuading a fleeing suspect to stop.
Sergeant Cameron Shanks, head of Central
Scotland’s dog unit and chairman of the Scottish Police Dog Handlers Conference,
looked after Mac for seven weeks after the dog was discovered stray on a golf
course in Stirling.
"This is the first Rottweiler to be used in
Scotland. If he is a success we may well use more in future," he said.
"The biggest problem we have had recently is
the lack of good quality dogs. The German shepherds these days are being bred
for show. This is to get the looks, but the big problem for us is the
temperament - they are either too aggressive or not aggressive enough - and the
hips, they get really bad hips."
He said Mac, who is being trained with handler
Jonathan Inglis in Glasgow, was one of the best dogs on the course.
"There are dogs from Strathclyde Police’s
breeding programme and he’s miles ahead of them. There are various tests and
he’s passed them with flying colours," Shanks said.
He said it was apparent from the moment Mac
obediently jumped into the back of the van when he was picked up from the golf
course that he was a friendly animal.
"I took him in the office and he was giving me
a paw and lying on his back. I’ve never met a more placid dog in my life. Even
when he is doing his ‘criminal work’ he’s just doing it because he knows he’s
getting a ball at the end of it."
Mac’s duties as a police dog will include
tracking criminals from the scene of the crime, searching for property and
people, dealing with football crowds and chasing suspects who refuse to stop.
"It’s very rare you have to send a police dog
after somebody once you shout: ‘Police, stand still or I’ll release the dog’,"
Shanks said. "And when you have to, the damage caused by the Rottweiler is
actually less than an Alsatian."
Tests have found the Alsatian often has to
readjust to get a proper hold with its jaws - causing further damage to the
suspect - because of its long snout. The shorter jaw of the Rottweiler and its
considerable strength means this is less likely to happen as it is able to
establish a firm grip at once.
In one of the most horrific incidents involving
Rottweilers, which helped establish its reputation as a ‘devil dog’, an
11-year-old girl from Dundee was killed by two of the dogs while on holiday in
Dunoon in 1989. She had been walking the dogs at the time and the attack began
suddenly after they started licking her face in an apparent show of affection.
The owner had the two dogs put down along with two others he owned.
But dog trainer Janet Sykes, who has worked
with both Rottweilers and German shepherds for the army and police forces south
of the Border, insisted they were not inherently dangerous animals. "They are
tremendously easy to train. I find the Rottie in the right hands is a fantastic
dog," she said.
And she said the Rottweiler made the better
police dog.
"In my personal experience, a German shepherd
can be a coward," she said. "My friends have got a German shepherd and two
Rottweilers. If somebody breaks in, the German shepherd is likely to make a lot
of noise and then hightail it to the bedroom, while the Rottweilers will sit on
him."
Betty Young, secretary of the German Shepherd
Dog Club of Scotland, admitted Rottweilers would make good police dogs, but
insisted: "It would be a shame if the police decided they didn’t want German
shepherds. I would say a Rottweiler is every bit as good as a German shepherd,
but I don’t think they would be any better."
BATTLE OF THE BREEDS
ROTTWEILERS have size on their side when
compared with the German shepherd. The biggest of Scotland’s traditional police
dogs weigh just under seven stone while a well-conditioned Rottweiler is about
nine stone.
Both breeds were first used by humans to herd
domestic animals.
In 7th century Germany, they used Alsation dogs
not far removed from wild wolves to herd their sheep.
The Rottweiler has an older pedigree with the
Romans using them to herd cattle.
German shepherds first started coming to
Britain in significant numbers after the First World War.
They were used by the German army as messenger
dogs and to find casualties on the battlefield.
British soldiers came to admire the dogs’
courage and intelligence and a large number brought them back to Britain, from
where they spread across the world.
The Rottweiler came to prominence comparatively
recently amid the uproar over dangerous dogs in the 1980s and early 1990s.
However, unlike the pit bull, it does not have
be muzzled in public.
|