Dogged measures of safety
Jose Paul Corona
A year after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 business owners in Huntington Beach have a new crime-fighting resource they
can consult to make their workplace safer.
Dennis Kennedy and his golden retriever, Cash, are for hire to
sniff out potential problems. Kennedy is the president of Security
Operations Group, in Huntington Beach, a private security firm that
provides firearm and bodyguard training. Many large companies hire
Kennedy to do security sweeps.
“We do all our work in plain clothes,†he said. By doing so he
avoids making anyone nervous or arousing suspicions, he said. “We can
go in and very discretely look for guns and explosives.â€
Kennedy, a 50-year-old Air Force and Army veteran and former
Garden Grove police officer and Surf City resident, opened the firm
eight years ago in Long Beach, but moved his office to Huntington
Beach two years ago.
The newest member of the security firm’s team, Cash, a 2-year-old
golden retriever that Kennedy bought for $10,000, has filled a void
in the firm. In the aftermath of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks
Kennedy began to get a lot of calls asking if he had a bomb-sniffing
dog. It wasn’t a service he had considered previously, but the high
number of requests convinced him that it was something that he should
look into.
Cash joined Security Operations Group last month, after 10 months
of intensive training, and has already sniffed out trouble for one
company. In a recent sweep of an office, Cash found a gun holster in
an employee’s desk.
The leather holster had been in a desk drawer hidden under some
papers for so long that it had left an impression in the drawer, said
Kennedy, who believes that the employee who had the holster in his
desk may have been tipped off to the security sweep and removed the
gun.
Large companies have hired the firm, rather than call police, to
avoid publicity if a weapon is found, Kennedy said.
“They decide how they want to deal with it, [which] might not be
to call the police,†he said.
He said his presence also acts a deterrent oftentimes and
reinforces a companies weapons policy at the same time.
“They want to make an impression, but without the bomb squad and
not on the 5 o’clock news,†he said.
Police officials don’t discourage business owners from using such
services, but said the proper authorities should be called if there
is a possible danger.
“If it makes people feel safe and they’re willing to spend the
money then it’s a good thing,†Huntington Beach Police Sgt. Gary Meza
said. “But if they see a suspicious device they should call us.â€
While Cash has found firearms products, he has yet to find any
bombs. Despite Cash’s hefty price tag and extensive training, Kennedy
said he still finds himself in awe of what the dog can do.
“I’m just amazed that they can find these things,†he said, adding
that X-ray machines and other mechanical devices can’t do what Cash
does. “Bomb-sniffing dogs are the best tool in explosives detection.â€
While Kennedy loves his dog and his work, he laments that people
need his services.
“It’s a shame that there even has to be such a thing as a
bomb-sniffing dog,†he said.
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