Amen to that!! Shameless plug for my favorite charity, the Animal Legal Defense Fund. Great rating on Charity Navigator and where my entire estate is going when I die. We need to change and enforce laws to help the powerless. ♥️
Getting a few pounds of powdered fent off the street definitely saved more than a few lives. That shit gets divided up into drugs that shouldn't have fent in them. No drugs should have fent in them aside from pharmaceutical fentanyl, but I mean stuff like weed, cocaine, meth, psychedelics, xanax, or ecstasy where the user won't be expecting a crazy high dose of opiates... and even in opiates it's an issue when it ends up in stuff like heroin because the users well set up there normal dose, only for it to be way more potent from the fent, and they end up dying... which only helps the dealers rep.. some dealers add a crazy amount to a couple bags and deal them out to intentionally kill a bad customer just to get other customers excited about really strong dope.
The drug world is an awful, disgusting, grimey ass place that has some incredibly disturbing and fascinating psychological conundrums that the world is a long way from solving... but at least we have police pups out here making the world safer till then.
The weed busts irritates me but fuck anyone dealing or cutting drugs with fentanyl. Those motherfuckers can burn. He's a good dog and earned his retirement.
There is a fantastic episode of the podcast Criminal called Officer Talon that goes into a lot of detail about how K9s are trained, how they work, and what retirement looks like.
Notably, K9s are bred and trained to be hyper-alpha dogs so you can’t really home two together. Officer Talon’s human puts in a lot of effort to keep Talon and his current K9 partner separate so he can ensure that Talon gets to stay in his forever home. My favorite part is that Talon has to be kept where he cannot see his human leaving for work because he’ll get jealous and upset.
I’m pretty sure my collie’s ‘job’ is patrolling the neighbourhood on our walks. If there’s a vehicle out of place he’ll hunker down and start walking slowly and cautiously as we approach it. People we see all the time are totally fine , but if there’s a stranger in the neighbourhood he’s immediately suspicious of them. Not in a mean way at all , but I can tell that he’s unsure about why they’re there etc. I more or less let him dictate where we go on our walks and he has different routes that he’ll take each night.
My dad had a border collie who’s job was frisbee. He never, ever stopped. Old, blind, deaf and he’d still trot through his arthritis to retrieve it and bring it back until his dying day. He was the best
Makes you think about our fates when we retire. After decades of work, even if you want to, it's hard to let go of work without letting go of a large part of your daily identity.
I used to work at a nursing home. Had at least two residents we would have to give tasks similar to what they had as jobs to keep them busy. One we kept finding on the floor cause he was trying to fix cars or farm equipment, had to put that in his care plan iirc if he could vocalize that’s why he was on the ground it was ok (we still checked him though). I think family finally brought in some toy tractors and tools to work with. My favorite though was the retired nurse. You’d have to get creative getting her out of other residents rooms and my method usually involved asking her to look over someone’s vitals for me.
I did maintenance at a home, my senior year of high school. A couple of the residents would follow me around, telling me how to do stuff, giving me advice, teaching me how to use tools... I loved those old guys. I miss them.
I have become disabled and I miss working so much. I feel like I lost my identity. I never would have guessed. I’m also bored because I can’t do anything. I’m sure that’s part of it for retired/elderly folks and dogs
My dad had 2 massive strokes and was a construction worker for 30+ years. It's killing him to be as immobile as he is, with his mental facilities intact.
Lately we have been getting him into diy building things that he's capable of. I'm not sure of your mobility, but if you have use of 2 hands then some of those cool book nook scenes, or Legos have been a life changer.
FYI the book nook stuff takes a LONG time. They're tiny and you build them from the ground up
My neighbor growing up had a hospital therapy dog. Sweet dog. But she was getting old and was retired and they got a new trainee dog to replace her. Well apparently she knew she was being replaced because the first day the new dog was to go to the hospital where they worked and she wasn’t she blocked the path to the car and wouldn’t let the new dog get anywhere near it. They definitely know when they’re being replaced.
>hyper-alpha dogs
Haven't researchers been touting that the whole alpha thing is bunk for quite a while now and that the concept gets conflated with aggression?
Even the guy who coined the phrase spoke out against it, but yeah, we can't deny that it's got a whole new meaning now. Not sure it applies to dogs ever though; they don't have an ego in the same way that humans do.
A friend of mines dad was K9 officer, dog was absolutely terrifying when it was working. Then after it retired he kept it and got it de trained somehow. It was an absolute baby after that. Just wanted to cuddle it was like a different dog.
In being selected to be an officer dog they have to have both the ability to be aggressive on command and also the ability to turn it off on command. They have to have that off switch. The ones that don't don't get selected.
I did scent work with my puppy because it was the only thing on the planet that would tire him out. And one day i had all these boxes laid out in the parking lot and neighbor came home and saw my dog searching around the parking lot and neighbor freaked out because he thought I was training a drug dog (I’m not a cop so would be pretty weird, lol).
I was like…believe me bro, we don’t need a dog to sniff out what you’re doing. Everyone knows.
My uncle was a police officer with the K-9 unit and worked with a yellow lab named Bruce for several years. He (my uncle) ended up transferring to a different unit though.
A few years later, Bruce retired, and my uncle got to bring him home as a pet for his twilight years.
I forget how the process works, but the police dept had a selection process, because several officers that worked with Bruce tried to adopt him at retirement
Varies state to state. When I lived in Texas it wasn’t allowed for officers to adopt retired dogs because they were “government property.”
My understanding was it was like how the dept. couldn’t use tax money to buy a huge TV, then “retire it and give it to Jim.”
But obviously service dogs are different, so they were being burned by a regulation aimed at combating corruption.
In 2019 voters overwhelmingly approved a new loophole to allow handlers to adopt their animals (including horses) after adoption.
I have a granddoggie that is a K9 and he looks just like Indy. He retired a couple of years ago and is now their pet. He has calmed down a lot but would still like to go to work. He still guards his dad when playing and would obviously give his life for him if needed. He really is a great dog.
There's a wonderful video floating around somewhere of a person who would adopts a retired drug sniffing canine and one day on a walk the dog just starts becoming obsessed with the tire wheel of a sports car.....ruh roh.
They get adopted by people who are well versed on the types of behaviors these kinds of dogs still have.
Yep! They typically live with their handlers anyways so they’ll either retire and live their lives out with them or another member of the police unit if their handler can’t adopt them for some reason
I dated a NJ K9 cop for several years and the town did away with the entire K9 unit. My ex's dog Bullet (ha) was very successful in apprehending suspects and then the town was sued by the victims.
My Dog:
6 years old. Over $800 worth of damage. In her career she has shit on 4 different rugs leaving one permanently stained. Her drool has marked the walls of every room in the house. I’ll occasionally find her sleeping on the kitchen table. She does not answer to her name and will bark at you when you try to reprimand her. I’d like to take this moment to thank her for her unwavering commitment and service.
I listen to my local scanners, and nothing tears me up like retirement calls and also when a firefighter or police officer dies and they do the call after the funeral.
He gets to go home with the officer and his family.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13246167/amp/k9-indy-texas-cop-german-shepherd-retires.html
Here's the full vid without that shit loud music
[K9 Indy Retires After 9 Years of Service🇺🇸🐕🦺 (youtube.com)](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jEEeEEm88bc)
I’ve been to two retirement ceremonies for police K9 officers…cried at both. The dogs do struggle with being left home after retirement. But, their officer knows ways to engage and lessen their anxiety, as best they can.
There was a video floating around a while ago for the retirement of a K9 where instead of a balloon drop they did a tennis ball drop; the reaction from the dog was hilarious.
God I love animals. They’re such gifts that we take for granted. I wish every animal felt loved and cared for (of course children too bur this is a post about an animal.)
Good for Indy! He looks so happy
~~That being said, don't let that distract you from the fact that marijuana is still a schedule 1 drug at the national level. ~~
Ahhh indy was a good boy
We created a system that drives people to do drugs to get away from life then spend ungodly amounts of money trying to put those people in jail over and over again. When we could've just taken the money we spend on policing and used it to better the lives of people so they don't do drugs in the first place.
I can tell, you the reason I don't do drugs isn't because of scary police and jail time. It's because I have a beautiful life that I don't need to escape from and I care about society enough to not commit crimes.
> I care about society enough to not commit crimes
If you really care about society, then you care enough to, on occasion, *break* a law. Fact is, not all laws are just laws. Citizens not only have a civic duty, but, as Dr. M.L. King once wrote, they have a "moral responsibility" to disobey unjust laws.
It seems you know this, but you're lucky to live the life of privilege you do. Not everyone enjoys that same privilege as you and they, your fellow citizens, need your help. Support those who stand up to unjust laws.
(I don't know that you personally needed to hear that, but I guarantee at least one of the people upvoting you does.)
😥😢😭, Great job, Indy. Hope you enjoy your retirement. Hope your forever home is with someone who loves you and treats you with the respect you deserve. ❤️
Getting your service record read out, damn that's badass.
Such a long record it outlasted the video too! Good dog!
For real , It's amazing to see how much that dog gave to the communities
It's amazing and cool as shit that they show these dogs the same respect they would show a human.
Indeed. Also if anyone hurts these dogs, they are charged the same way as if they hurt a human officer.
I think they get buried with full honors as well
Now if only we could get laws protecting all animals this way.
Amen to that!! Shameless plug for my favorite charity, the Animal Legal Defense Fund. Great rating on Charity Navigator and where my entire estate is going when I die. We need to change and enforce laws to help the powerless. ♥️
ALDF does amazing work and rarely gets appreciated. They’re the best!
I really wish they were more well known. The legal system is where we can hopefully change things on a wider scale. I'm so glad you root for them too!
The thing about the dogs, they don’t have situational awareness like a human, they just fucking go all out, no matter the risks. Fucking love dogs.
More in a lot of cases
That really is the bravest dog for real
the goodest of all
Not to mention that he's been exploiting treats by sanctimoniously vanishing into the back of the squad car for 9 years.
Lol
🤣🤣🤣
Very good! ![gif](emote|free_emotes_pack|joy)
Dog sounds like a narc, if we're being honest.
Usually snitches get stitches.. but this good boy deserves all the treats
In this case snitches get scritches.
ALL the scritches!
And all the bitches
😅😅😅
It's true, getting that fent off the street might have saved a few lives though. Or delayed some deaths, however real you wanna be about addiction.
Getting a few pounds of powdered fent off the street definitely saved more than a few lives. That shit gets divided up into drugs that shouldn't have fent in them. No drugs should have fent in them aside from pharmaceutical fentanyl, but I mean stuff like weed, cocaine, meth, psychedelics, xanax, or ecstasy where the user won't be expecting a crazy high dose of opiates... and even in opiates it's an issue when it ends up in stuff like heroin because the users well set up there normal dose, only for it to be way more potent from the fent, and they end up dying... which only helps the dealers rep.. some dealers add a crazy amount to a couple bags and deal them out to intentionally kill a bad customer just to get other customers excited about really strong dope. The drug world is an awful, disgusting, grimey ass place that has some incredibly disturbing and fascinating psychological conundrums that the world is a long way from solving... but at least we have police pups out here making the world safer till then.
Dude. When I heard people were finding fent in weed, something just broke in me. What in the multiverse fuck.
The weed busts irritates me but fuck anyone dealing or cutting drugs with fentanyl. Those motherfuckers can burn. He's a good dog and earned his retirement.
Almost as much meth as weed by weight. That's crazy.
Fentanyl is so dangerous, in this case he’s a good boy
You wouldn't catch a cat pulling that nonsense!
I could however see my cats framing me, but definitely never narc on me.
It's the 4000 pounds of marijuana that's bogus. The fentanyl and meth on the other hand...
Cats would NEVER
does he get to keep the dog?
There is a fantastic episode of the podcast Criminal called Officer Talon that goes into a lot of detail about how K9s are trained, how they work, and what retirement looks like. Notably, K9s are bred and trained to be hyper-alpha dogs so you can’t really home two together. Officer Talon’s human puts in a lot of effort to keep Talon and his current K9 partner separate so he can ensure that Talon gets to stay in his forever home. My favorite part is that Talon has to be kept where he cannot see his human leaving for work because he’ll get jealous and upset.
I love how retired bomb sniffing dogs need to be given decoy bombs to find or they get depressed.
The nature of working dogs, other breeds get depressed as well without a "job" to do.
Dam i need to find job!
Username checks out 😭
Thank goodness my dog's jobs are lounging, loafing, and sleeping (Shih tzu, lap dog born and bred) so he's gonna be fine
Humans too.
I’m pretty sure my collie’s ‘job’ is patrolling the neighbourhood on our walks. If there’s a vehicle out of place he’ll hunker down and start walking slowly and cautiously as we approach it. People we see all the time are totally fine , but if there’s a stranger in the neighbourhood he’s immediately suspicious of them. Not in a mean way at all , but I can tell that he’s unsure about why they’re there etc. I more or less let him dictate where we go on our walks and he has different routes that he’ll take each night.
My dad had a border collie who’s job was frisbee. He never, ever stopped. Old, blind, deaf and he’d still trot through his arthritis to retrieve it and bring it back until his dying day. He was the best
Makes you think about our fates when we retire. After decades of work, even if you want to, it's hard to let go of work without letting go of a large part of your daily identity.
I used to work at a nursing home. Had at least two residents we would have to give tasks similar to what they had as jobs to keep them busy. One we kept finding on the floor cause he was trying to fix cars or farm equipment, had to put that in his care plan iirc if he could vocalize that’s why he was on the ground it was ok (we still checked him though). I think family finally brought in some toy tractors and tools to work with. My favorite though was the retired nurse. You’d have to get creative getting her out of other residents rooms and my method usually involved asking her to look over someone’s vitals for me.
I did maintenance at a home, my senior year of high school. A couple of the residents would follow me around, telling me how to do stuff, giving me advice, teaching me how to use tools... I loved those old guys. I miss them.
I have become disabled and I miss working so much. I feel like I lost my identity. I never would have guessed. I’m also bored because I can’t do anything. I’m sure that’s part of it for retired/elderly folks and dogs
My dad had 2 massive strokes and was a construction worker for 30+ years. It's killing him to be as immobile as he is, with his mental facilities intact. Lately we have been getting him into diy building things that he's capable of. I'm not sure of your mobility, but if you have use of 2 hands then some of those cool book nook scenes, or Legos have been a life changer. FYI the book nook stuff takes a LONG time. They're tiny and you build them from the ground up
My neighbor growing up had a hospital therapy dog. Sweet dog. But she was getting old and was retired and they got a new trainee dog to replace her. Well apparently she knew she was being replaced because the first day the new dog was to go to the hospital where they worked and she wasn’t she blocked the path to the car and wouldn’t let the new dog get anywhere near it. They definitely know when they’re being replaced.
>hyper-alpha dogs Haven't researchers been touting that the whole alpha thing is bunk for quite a while now and that the concept gets conflated with aggression?
It's debunked that is what happens in nature, but it's definitely behaviour you can train your dog to have
Even the guy who coined the phrase spoke out against it, but yeah, we can't deny that it's got a whole new meaning now. Not sure it applies to dogs ever though; they don't have an ego in the same way that humans do.
A friend of mines dad was K9 officer, dog was absolutely terrifying when it was working. Then after it retired he kept it and got it de trained somehow. It was an absolute baby after that. Just wanted to cuddle it was like a different dog.
In being selected to be an officer dog they have to have both the ability to be aggressive on command and also the ability to turn it off on command. They have to have that off switch. The ones that don't don't get selected.
My buddy has his daughter’s dog from the military. At first I was scared to meet him, then I realized he doesn’t care about me. What a good dog.
They can
Thats awesome
I’m assuming this is the guys dog he cares for off duty, and plans on keeping him after retirement with all the emotions he’s holding in here
My dad's friend was a K9 unit in JFK. He kept his dog and as you could guess it was a big beautiful German Shepard such a good dog.
He'll never be able to smoke weed again.
I did scent work with my puppy because it was the only thing on the planet that would tire him out. And one day i had all these boxes laid out in the parking lot and neighbor came home and saw my dog searching around the parking lot and neighbor freaked out because he thought I was training a drug dog (I’m not a cop so would be pretty weird, lol). I was like…believe me bro, we don’t need a dog to sniff out what you’re doing. Everyone knows.
My uncle was a police officer with the K-9 unit and worked with a yellow lab named Bruce for several years. He (my uncle) ended up transferring to a different unit though. A few years later, Bruce retired, and my uncle got to bring him home as a pet for his twilight years. I forget how the process works, but the police dept had a selection process, because several officers that worked with Bruce tried to adopt him at retirement
Varies state to state. When I lived in Texas it wasn’t allowed for officers to adopt retired dogs because they were “government property.” My understanding was it was like how the dept. couldn’t use tax money to buy a huge TV, then “retire it and give it to Jim.” But obviously service dogs are different, so they were being burned by a regulation aimed at combating corruption. In 2019 voters overwhelmingly approved a new loophole to allow handlers to adopt their animals (including horses) after adoption.
I think it depends. Read a story about an officer not being allowed to keep his after it retired and had to fight for the dog.
I read that as "had to fight the dog." 🤣
From what I know police K9s live with their handlers full time and stay with them after. It would be cruel to remove the dog from their possession.
happy noise
I have a granddoggie that is a K9 and he looks just like Indy. He retired a couple of years ago and is now their pet. He has calmed down a lot but would still like to go to work. He still guards his dad when playing and would obviously give his life for him if needed. He really is a great dog.
There's a wonderful video floating around somewhere of a person who would adopts a retired drug sniffing canine and one day on a walk the dog just starts becoming obsessed with the tire wheel of a sports car.....ruh roh. They get adopted by people who are well versed on the types of behaviors these kinds of dogs still have.
When you retire your dog, what happens? Obviously you get another one. But does your retired dog just become you house pet?
Yep! They typically live with their handlers anyways so they’ll either retire and live their lives out with them or another member of the police unit if their handler can’t adopt them for some reason
I dated a NJ K9 cop for several years and the town did away with the entire K9 unit. My ex's dog Bullet (ha) was very successful in apprehending suspects and then the town was sued by the victims.
So what??? Don’t leave us hanging?
the dog was sentenced to stay off the couch for 5-7 days
That's too harsh
Ruff
Damn you
That's cruel and unusual paw-nishment. Unconstitutional.
They are most often adopted by their human partner.
They move to Barka Raton, FL.
> They move to Barka Raton, FL. Go to your room.
My Dog: 6 years old. Over $800 worth of damage. In her career she has shit on 4 different rugs leaving one permanently stained. Her drool has marked the walls of every room in the house. I’ll occasionally find her sleeping on the kitchen table. She does not answer to her name and will bark at you when you try to reprimand her. I’d like to take this moment to thank her for her unwavering commitment and service.
This is the best
Rookie numbers
Thank her for her service
She is hereby awarded the Treat of Honour.
Fuck, my dog had 2 ACL surgeries that were $4k each
And you would not trade her for anything.
Not a single thing
His tongue in his cheek to stop the tears 😩 me too big guy, me too
Tongue was about to bust through his skin he was pushing so hard! 😭 Let those tears flow- it's ok!
DON'T WORRY, MAN, I DID THE UGLY CRY FOR YOU
I listen to my local scanners, and nothing tears me up like retirement calls and also when a firefighter or police officer dies and they do the call after the funeral.
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I fucking love they get their own badge numbers
They are law enforcement officers and hold rank just like humans
Sir, MAJOR K9 Indi.
We named the dog Indiana.
Oh good, now I'm laughing and crying at the same time like a psychopath
My cat’s name is Indy! This made me very emotional lol
YOU were named after the dog??
I hate when you call me Junior!
Got a lot of fond memories of that dog
May he be happy and free from care, pain, and anxiety for the rest of Wray’s. 🙏💐
Good boy.
Thank god the music is so loud! I almost heard the video!
Good on the dog for the fent and meth but he coulda sniffed the other way when it came to weed
My cat looking at me like “You think dogs are so great but I’d *never* rat out your stash.”
That’s exactly what I said ha.
I retiret my old k9 army dog. After 5 years. Bq healt. She become my family dog for 5 years more and she was happy to the end. Good Dog.
Man, this is what social media should be about… that was incredibly moving… great share !
He gets to go home with the officer and his family. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13246167/amp/k9-indy-texas-cop-german-shepherd-retires.html
That music ruined the video :(
Oh yeah, it absolutely needed to be louder….
100%good boy
Where does he retire to? I hope he gets a good home? What do they do with them?
Not ACAB, some are good boys.
Bark narc but still a good dog
Watched this and did the ugly crying for him.
Are officers allowed to adopt them?
Thank you for your stellar work! Good boy!!!
Here's the full vid without that shit loud music [K9 Indy Retires After 9 Years of Service🇺🇸🐕🦺 (youtube.com)](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jEEeEEm88bc)
I'm not crying, you're crying!
What happens post retirement? Does the officer get to keep the doggo?
They should put him undercover. He can pose as a normal house pet all the while he's scoping out the neighborhoods when he goes for daily walks.
Awww. He is going to miss him. Does anyone know, if they can keep the dog as a pet or not??
One day I hope to be as useful as that dog!
Good boy.
I’ve been to two retirement ceremonies for police K9 officers…cried at both. The dogs do struggle with being left home after retirement. But, their officer knows ways to engage and lessen their anxiety, as best they can.
There was a video floating around a while ago for the retirement of a K9 where instead of a balloon drop they did a tennis ball drop; the reaction from the dog was hilarious.
Dogs are a special gift from God to humans!! Most loyal animals on earth even in the face of death…
Clearly he loves you too. I hope you were able to adopt him.
The goodest boy
That’s just a good boy right there. Enjoy your well deserved retirement Indy. You earned it!!
Thanks Indy for catching the bad people.
God I love animals. They’re such gifts that we take for granted. I wish every animal felt loved and cared for (of course children too bur this is a post about an animal.)
Just retired my shepherd as well!!! Cheers.
Thas a good boi
I feel like we could have gotten the full video. I presume it was finally confirmed that the Good Boy was, in fact, him. He was the Good Boy.
Should be in r/mademecry
Gents. Just cry. Don’t hold it in.
Good for Indy! He looks so happy ~~That being said, don't let that distract you from the fact that marijuana is still a schedule 1 drug at the national level. ~~ Ahhh indy was a good boy
Imagine if they just legalised drugs.
We created a system that drives people to do drugs to get away from life then spend ungodly amounts of money trying to put those people in jail over and over again. When we could've just taken the money we spend on policing and used it to better the lives of people so they don't do drugs in the first place. I can tell, you the reason I don't do drugs isn't because of scary police and jail time. It's because I have a beautiful life that I don't need to escape from and I care about society enough to not commit crimes.
> I care about society enough to not commit crimes If you really care about society, then you care enough to, on occasion, *break* a law. Fact is, not all laws are just laws. Citizens not only have a civic duty, but, as Dr. M.L. King once wrote, they have a "moral responsibility" to disobey unjust laws. It seems you know this, but you're lucky to live the life of privilege you do. Not everyone enjoys that same privilege as you and they, your fellow citizens, need your help. Support those who stand up to unjust laws. (I don't know that you personally needed to hear that, but I guarantee at least one of the people upvoting you does.)
Let's see a cat do that
And most of all he’s a good boy.
Just give the good boy a steak already!
Sat at work with tears rolling down my face as i watched! Thank you for your service Indy ❤️
Great job office K91!
NARC
🫡 good boy
I failed. Many tears fell. What impressive accomplishments this dog racked up in his years of service!
Beautiful.
That’s a good boy, Indy
I ugly cried for you 😢, I couldn't do it without.
Better resume than mine
🫡🫡🫡🫡🫡
He’s a good boy!
Dogs are such angels, thank you for your service. Please smooch that pooch for me 💋🥰😍
I hope Indy gets the best retirement and get to enjoy life to the fullest! Bestest dog!
Wish it was a longer video. I saw one once, and the other officers on the radio frequency all said their goodbyes to the K9 and checked out.
All fun and games from here in. It's a good thing!
😥😢😭, Great job, Indy. Hope you enjoy your retirement. Hope your forever home is with someone who loves you and treats you with the respect you deserve. ❤️
No worries. I ugly cried for you. 😭
He was the bestest of boys. :(
I ugly cried for ya bro.
Officer Tacticool showing emotion for the first time
Bad ass dog
Dogsare great, we don't deserve them
That's badass.
Lost my boy named Indy about a year ago. This shit hit hard. Good job Indy!
Man I would be crying.. I did anyways, you can just see their bond and love for each other
We don’t deserve dogs.
What happens to him now? Good things, I hope. Lots of treats and running through the tall grass!
He looks like a grizzled vet that has seen some things. Glad he made it through to retirement.
I love dogs.
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Damn. Thats a good boy.
63 years of service, that’s awesome!
That was good too see, and he made it to the end after being what sounds like Top Dog.
That’s an incredible good boy!
Such a good boy.
Be still my heart!❤️
Too late to stop the ugly cry....
That’s a lot of weed!
I’m not crying. Got something in my eye.
Amazing. Good boy
Next mission: Live the best life at home
❤️
Enjoy your retirement Indy❤️ You’ve definitely earned it
Awesome ty for your services
Why can’t our cops stay in shape?
Dog cooler then most vets out here
I really, really wish people would stop putting music on top of videos like this. Just. Let. Us. Watch. The. Actual. Unedited. Footage.
Give that pup some treats during that retirement staying hot damn🐶😭🥰