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‘The ultimate working dog’: Montgomery Co. K9s with Czech heritage make embassy appearance

‘The ultimate working dog’: Montgomery Co. K9s with Czech heritage make embassy appearance

Local canines of Czech origin put on an exciting show at the Czech Republic embassy in D.C. on Sunday. The dogs, Rey and Bolo, are members of the Montgomery County Sheriff's Office K9 unit.

Bolo and his handlers prepare to show the crowd what a police K9 with Czech heritage is capable of. (WTOP / Sandy Kozel)

Local canines of Czech origin put on an exciting show at the Czech Republic embassy in D.C. on Sunday.

The dogs, Rey and Bolo, are members of the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office K9 unit. They were born in Europe, but trained here.

Montgomery County Sheriff’s Deputy Zach Buttrey, who has been a member of the K9 unit for 14 years, said the dogs have been part of the embassy open house for the past few years.

On Sunday, Rey and Bolo, both a Belgian Malinois-German Shepherd mix, showed off how they track and even how they attack on command.

Bolo, a Belgian Malinois-German Shepherd mix and member of the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office K9 unit, was born in the Czech Republic, but trained in the U.S. (WTOP / Sandy Kozel)

“The dogs are great. They’re very smart, very loyal, very protective, and they are the ultimate working dog because they want to work,” Buttrey said.

Buttrey led off the demonstration by having someone from the crowd toss a flashlight onto the grassy hillside outside the embassy. It didn’t take Rey long to sniff it out.

“Right now she’s looking for human odor,” Rey’s handler said.

Then it was time for Bolo’s appearance. He sat, patiently waiting for the order to attack the padded sleeve Buttrey had slid onto his arm. The dog whined and tugged — and only stopped once Buttrey pulled his arm out of the sleeve. The crowd applauded the K9 as it shook its target back and forth with its mouth.

Buttrey said a demonstration like this one “shows the public how helpful the K9s are, whether it’s to locate a suspect, locate a missing person, find some evidence, (or) search a building for someone.” He calls the K9s a great resource for assisting law enforcement.

The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office has five K9 dogs and two therapy dogs. They live with their human partners and are ”family dogs when they’re not working,” Buttrey told the crowd.

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