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Police dog named Gazza shot dead at New Zealand gun siege | |
(35 minutes later) | |
New Zealand police surrounded a property in Wellington after an armed man shot and killed a police dog named Gazza in a dramatic encounter where one officer had to jump out of a second-storey window to safety. | |
Related: New Zealand police shooting siege ends after 22 hours | Related: New Zealand police shooting siege ends after 22 hours |
The armed offenders squad was negotiating with the man to put down his weapons and peacefully leave the house on Friday afternoon. | The armed offenders squad was negotiating with the man to put down his weapons and peacefully leave the house on Friday afternoon. |
In March four police officers were shot and wounded during a siege near the rural town of Kawerau in the Bay of Plenty. | |
Gazza was the 24th police dog killed in the line of duty in New Zealand, the force said. | |
The German shepherd graduated in 2013 with his handler, Constable Josh Robertson, and had worked in Wellington ever since, tracking and catching offenders. | |
He was popular at schools, sports grounds and open days in the capital. | |
Gazza was previously involved in an incident where he was choked by an offender in 2014 after tracking him for three and a half kilometres through Wainuiomata. | |
A memorial service will be held for Gazza at the police dog training centre | |
The Wellington police district commander, Superintendent Sam Hoyle, said the force would grieve for the dog as they would any other colleague. | |
“It’s with great sadness that I can advise one of our police dogs was shot and killed today in the line of duty while executing a routine search warrant in Porirua,” Superintendent Hoyle said in a statement. | |
“While at the address, a man presented a firearm and the police dog was shot and subsequently killed. Two officers immediately removed the dog’s body from the house and one officer jumped to safety out of a second-storey window.” | |
New Zealand’s first fully trained police dog, Miska, was brought over by ship from England in 1956, with a handful of puppies and adolescent dogs in training. | |
For the first decade the New Zealand dog squad was short on equipment, and vehicles, and did not wear a uniform. | For the first decade the New Zealand dog squad was short on equipment, and vehicles, and did not wear a uniform. |
Since then the canine police force has grown to more than a hundred dog teams country-wide, and has provided training for dog squads in Australia, the Pacific Islands and some Asian countries. | |
Police dogs attend around 40,000 call-outs a year and suffer around five injuries a year, according to the force. | |
The last police dog killed in New Zealand was Gage, who took a bullet for his handler in 2010 during a drugs raid in Christchurch. | The last police dog killed in New Zealand was Gage, who took a bullet for his handler in 2010 during a drugs raid in Christchurch. |