On Feb 27, an abandoned movie theater and a vacant building that was once a bar off of Coors and Paseo was transformed into training grounds for some of New Mexicoโs law enforcement officers. What made this training unique was that many of the police participating in the training exercises were not humans, they were dogs. Over the loud, authoritative voices of law enforcement, the barking and snarling of the dogs was deafening as they rushed through empty window frames to bite trainers wearing protective clothing. The scenarios were staged, but as the trainers, or โdecoysโ removed their protective โbite-sleeves,โ the large, multi-colored bruises covering their arms were unmistakably real.
The special training event was hosted by Spikeโs K9 Fund and Spikeโs School, a national nonprofit created to help working dogs. The organization was founded by James Hatch, a 26-year retired Naval Special Warfare Operator, serving 22 of those years with the SEAL team. Hatch, who says that his life was โregularly spared by the work of K9sโ was badly injured in Afghanistan on his final deployment and says that his life was spared by a K9 named Remco, who died in battle. The company is named after one of the dogs who died serving alongside Hatch.
According to Spikeโs School Director Casey McCrosson, โA decoy is the person in a bite suit that will either get bit or is just the target for the training. They represent the suspect or the person that the dog should go after. So right now, a lot of it is bite work. We’ll get them in the suitโฆ a full Michelin-looking puffy thing that protects them from the actual punctures of a bite. Then we go down to hidden sleeves which are a little bit thinner.โ
Law Enforcement Agencies Training Together
Sandoval County Sheriff’s Office, Rio Rancho PD, Santa Fe PD, Kirtland Air Force Base, Border Patrol and the dogs from the Albuquerque Police Dept. joined in this collaborative training program that not only develops specialized skills for dogs and decoys but allows agencies to develop standards and best practices across departments. Sandoval County Sheriffโs Office K9 Sergeant Luke Osborn, who refers to his dog Udo as his partner, insists โWe say they’re a tool, but they’re more than that. The dogs are family to us. Udo has been an essential and vital component to saving my life at times, [and] other people’s lives and I think multiple instances recently have shown this to be true,โ said Osborn.
Last month, The Signpost reported on one potentially dangerous police standoff successfully de-escalated without casualties by SCSO deputies including Osborn and Udo.ย
Osbornโs partner Udo is about to turn seven, which is close to retirement age for service dogs. Spikeโs K9 Fund believes that โcare shouldn’t stop just because the dog retired,โ and donations are used to provide dogs with medical care after retirement as well. McCrossan says, โWe see a lot of dental work that needs done. We see a lot of torn CCLs and that’s a couple thousand dollars that handlers don’t have on hand to pay for.โ
According to Director McCrossan, Spikeโs K9 Fund has helped close to 2,600 dogs across the nation in all 50 states, but there are still 25,000 service dogs in need who could still use their help. This yearโs training classes are paid for by Tomahawk Strategic Solutions, a company run by several servicemen who were deployed with founder James Hatch.
To learn more about Spikeโs K9 Fund and where you can donate, visit spikesk9fund.org.

