Fire in the hole!
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TONY DODERO
“Cover your ears and eyes,” shouted Costa Mesa Police Lt. Karl
Schuler.
I fumbled for my sunglasses, shoved them onto my face and stuck my
fingers in my ears.
Baaaaang!
Across the room, I saw a yellow flash and curls of white smoke.
Schuler and I, and a number of other observers, Costa Mesa police
officers, Orange County sheriff’s deputies and Costa Mesa
firefighters, made our way to the rubble amid the strong smell of
sulfur.
There I saw the former office of Daily Pilot Managing Editor S.J.
Cahn. The door had been ripped in two with a big hole in the wall
near his old window. It wasn’t pretty.
Then, I glanced over at my old office next door to see what it
looked like.
The officers had been there earlier. The window was shattered and
the door busted apart. That’s OK. I always hated how that door stuck.
Across the room, Sports Editor Rich Dunn’s former office didn’t look
much better, and next up was the old photo department.
Indeed, this Wednesday, the Daily Pilot’s old office building, now
vacant and ready for demolition, was being used as a facility to
train SWAT team members from the county sheriff, Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach police.
Hearing about the event, I invited myself to come and watch what
was to become of the place I worked out of for 15 years.
I got more than I bargained for as Schuler took me on a tour of
the upstairs offices that used to house the Daily Pilot newsroom.
There, the SWAT team was working one of four scenarios -- the
explosive breech scenario, the technique of opening up doors and
startling the life out of criminal suspects through the use of
explosives.
Why the officers chose to blow up the newsroom versus another part
of the building is anyone’s call, but it was interesting to watch,
nonetheless.
Aside from the explosive breech, there was the tool breech
scenario; the active shooter scenario, in which a Columbine-style
shooter is wading through the building; and the K-9 scenario, which I
also got to observe.
In this scenario, the SWAT team officers are learning how to team
up with the dogs against the bad guys.
“We’re trying to integrate dogs with the SWAT team because they
are such a valuable resource,” Schuler said.
Dogs, I learned, are great for crawling under houses or climbing
into attics, places suspects may be hiding. And in particular, the
dogs used by police K-9 units today, Belgian malinois, have more
energy and less health problems than their German shepherd
counterparts.
As we stood outside waiting to watch the demonstration of the K-9
unit, Costa Mesa Senior K-9 Officer Mike Cohen explained that the
Belgian malinois were also preferred because their span on the job is
six to eight years versus the three to four for shepherds.
As looked over at the dog that was ready to pounce on the
simulated suspect, I could see why. He couldn’t sit still (a lot like
my 21-month-old son), and his muscles were rippling with
anticipation.
“He’s amped, he’s ready, he knows he’s going to get something,”
Cohen said.
And get something he did.
After swirling about the back rooms of the old Pilot building,
sniffing for a trace of the target, the dog zeroed in on the faux
suspect, crouching behind a door-covered nook behind the stairs. The
officers ordered the suspect to come out, and the suspect -- in
reality an officer dressed in a bite suit -- slowly creaked the door
open.
Within seconds, the dog bolted across the room and with his jaws
open, flew into the air and latched onto the arms of the officer with
his teeth, violently shaking his head as the fake suspect headed
toward the SWAT team.
“That must be terrifying to suspects,” I said to Cohen. Yep, he
said, but he noted that if the suspects would not panic, they would
come out of such incidents unscathed. But most suspects fight with
the dogs and pay a hefty price, he said.
Wednesday’s drill was part of a larger effort to join forces with
all the public safety agencies, Schuler said.
For example, the Costa Mesa police officers don’t have the
explosive ability that the sheriff’s deputies have, and the
paramedics are even teaming with SWAT teams to assist with officers
who may get injured at a crime scene or even during training, Schuler
said.
“We feel it’s important to share resources as a team,” Schuler
said.
And even though we’ve been gone since October, it was fun to know
that the old Daily Pilot building could be part of that resource,
sharing as well. And I have to admit it was especially fun watching
Cahn’s office get blown to bits.
* TONY DODERO is the editor. He may be reached at (714) 966-4608
or by e-mail at [email protected].
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