K9 Diego – Marietta, Ohio


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Handler – Officer Glen McClelland

Last ride for former Marietta K-9

The importance of the role that police dogs play in law enforcement was underscored Friday morning as the Marietta Police Department and several other agencies from around the region gathered to pay tribute to Diego, a police dog that served Marietta for nearly seven years. Diego was close to 2 years old when he started with the department in October 2007. He retired in early 2014, afflicted, as many large dogs are, with arthritis, after a career of helping to catch criminals and to find lost people. Diego died in late March, and on Friday received Last Ride honors, with a motorcade from Don Drumm Stadium to police headquarters. Putnam Street was lined with officers and firefighters who saluted as the vehicles filled both lanes in the block and the police radio announced End of Watch for him. Officer Glen McClelland was Diego’s handler and partner during his time with the force and became his companion in retirement. “He was a great dog, he just loved people, especially kids,” McClelland said Friday after the Last Ride ceremony. “He always wanted to play, to get out his toys.” He remembered Diego as both an asset to his work and an ambassador for the police. “He was a hard worker, doing tracking, searches, drug detection – 90 percent of a K-9’s work is with his nose – but he also loved being socialized, doing demonstrations for children and the public, like the ones we do during the sternwheel festival,” he said. Once he and Diego got acquainted, McClelland said, he would take the dog into the squad room with him at night to write reports. “He’d sleep under my desk while I did the paperwork, but he never slept in the car,” McClelland said. The two were together around the clock for seven years, and when Diego retired he took up full-time residence at the McClelland household. “At first he missed the work – when I’d get ready to go to work, he lay on my boots because that was the last thing I’d put on before we went out the door,” he said. “He was sort of depressed at first, but he transitioned well, and enjoyed being at home with my wife and daughter.” After Diego’s retirement, McClelland began working with his successor, Edo.“You develop a unique bond, every dog is different,” he said. Even so, Diego was something special. Toni Roach, a dispatcher at the department, is also licensed to officiate marriages and performed the honors at the ceremony in August 2012 when McClelland married his wife, Nicole. Nicole’s father had died, and to Glen’s surprise, Roach said, Diego walked his bride down the aisle. Roach recalls McClelland bringing Diego in at the end of a shift. “I had treats, and he knew where they were,” she said. The first – and last – time Roach decided to “take a bite” or have the experience of being taken down by a police dog, Diego was her instructor. She put the protective cast on her arm and got ready.“An officer came up and stood behind me, he said he was going to catch me,” Roach remembers.“I said I didn’t think that was necessary – Diego was only a couple feet away – but when he hit me I would have gone right over. “I remember the first time he took down a runner, somebody they were trying to serve a warrant on,” Roach said. “He was such a nice dog, you forget what he could do.” McClelland said Diego died after suffering a paralyzing stroke in late March. He was 13 years old. Representatives of law enforcement agencies from around the region came to participate in the Last Ride ceremony. Diego’s name will be engraved on a plaque bearing the names of the department’s other K-9 members and their dates of service.

Submitted By Jim Cortina

James A. Cortina has been involved with police dogs since 1972 and currently on the Board of Directors for the Connecticut Police Work Dog Association Inc. Jim has been appointed as Treasurer since its inception in 1991. Jim is one of the charter members of the C.P.W.D.A. organization. Since 1975 he has been a certified professional dog trainer and received his Master Trainer Certification in 1985. During his career he has provided armed K-9 strike crowd control for security agencies in Connecticut and out of state security companies. In conjunction with other members of the Connecticut Police Work Dog Association Inc. Board of Directors, he helped to draft Connecticut Statute 53-247(e) "Intentional Injury or Killing of Police K-9" which was passed by the Senate in 1993 and also assisted in implementing the prestigious Daniel Wasson Memorial K-9 Award in 1992. In 1993 he helped coordinate the North American Police Work Dog Association Nationals in New London, Connecticut. He was appointed Training Director for the New London County Work Dog Association from 1985-1987. He performed decoy work for Connecticut Police Work Dog Association Inc. in police K-9 demonstrations, trained several local police department canines, and coordinated training workshops for out-of-state police departments. He participated in the United States Police K-9 Association Trials in Croton on Hudson, New York in 1985 as a decoy. He is an avid photographer and received photography awards in 1989, 1990, and 1991 and currently takes photographs for the Connecticut Police Work Dog Association Inc.