SCHOFIELD BARRACKS, Hawaii –
Standing outside Sergeant Smith Theater where a possible bomb may be hidden, Spc. Arianna Dotson, a patrol explosive detector dog handler with 520th Military Working Dog (MWD) Detachment, 728th Military Police Battalion, 8th MP Brigade, 8th Theater Sustainment Command, waits with her K-9 partner, Dunco.
After several minutes tick by, Dotson looks at Dunco and gives him the command he has been waiting for.
"Seek!"
With that the test begins, and the team enters the theater to begin the search for possible threats.
The theater was just one of many different locations the four military police teams with the 520th MWD Detachment, had to search May 4-8, here, as the they worked to earn their K-9 team certifications.
Like every Soldier in the Army who is trained for the job they perform daily, each K-9 has a special job. MWDs can be trained as patrol explosive detector dogs (PEDD), patrol drug detector dogs (PDDD) or as specialized search dogs (SDD).
As with some special jobs, certification becomes a requirement and, for MWDs, it is a yearly requirement for all K-9 teams.
"If we don't certify, we can't do our jobs," said Staff Sgt. Nathan Stanton, PDDD handler.
Stanton emphasized, "We can't support our garrison or deployment missions."
Overseeing the certification, Master Sgt. William Etheridge, MWD program manager, Headquarters and Headquarters Battalion, U.S. Army Pacific, said that in addition to being able to work cohesively as a team, the K-9s must demonstrate detection proficiency in five different areas.
"The areas can be warehouses, vehicles, barracks, roadways or aircraft," Etheridge said. "It varies from installation."
In addition to detection proficiency, the handlers with PEDD and PDDD K-9s were tested on their aggression control, also called "bite work."
"Once a handler has released his K-9, the handler has to be able to call him off before he bites a suspect who has given up," Etheridge said.
Etheridge added that this was a critical task a team could not fail.
For SDD handler, Spc. Brandon Spears, this was one task he and his K-9, Macey, did not have to worry about.
"With a specialized search dog, you don't have to worry about the dog going after people or animals," Spears said. "There's no bite training involved."
While the certification is a weeklong process, Stanton said that it was no different than the training they do every day.
"The only difference is the program manager is here to see if we're proficient with our dogs and if we make a good team," he added.
Finally, after the weeklong testing, three of the four teams received their certification.
Etheridge added, "They still have a lot of training and growing to do."