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The biggest coke sniffers on the police force

Darina Schweizer
6/3/2024
Translation: Katherine Martin
Pictures: Christian Walker

They spend their days sniffing out ecstasy, meth and cocaine, tracking down money and searching for missing persons. Meet Anora and Diara, the Zurich Cantonal Police dogs who can find anything and anyone.

It’s quiet. The only sound to be heard is the occasional call of a great tit, echoing from the woods behind the Dübendorf Service Dog Centre. It’s hard to believe such a significant number of Switzerland’s 610 police dogs are trained at this facility, an area almost the size of two football pitches. Last year, the centre trained 33 of the country’s 99 canine recruits. And somehow, I’m not hearing a peep out of them.

The search picks up again. Anora quickly sniffs her way to the footwell of the van and stops again. This is where the crystal meth is hidden.

After another treat, the search continues. This time, it’s a controlled search. Guggisberg pulls out a stick with a small, coloured knob on the end of it. He uses it to show the dog where to look: in this case, under the open bonnet. When he taps on it, Anora jumps onto the engine.

Staying up there is no easy feat. The dog keeps having to use her paws to regain her balance. «She learned to do that on the training ground,» explains her owner, pointing at a large stretch of grass behind him. It’s where the service dogs navigate obstacles such as transparent grids or wobbly surfaces during their training. Using a ladder leading up to a little wooden house, they become accustomed to being carried or pushed through a window.

Clear signals used in training

In the meantime, Anora’s found what she was looking for and shows us the cocaine wedged between the battery and the brake fluid. It’s time for a break. After all, as far as the dog’s concerned, this was a real police operation, not a drill. The air-conditioned van’s already waiting for her.

When we’re standing in front of it, Guggisberg simply uses a finger to tell Anora to sit. I’m amazed at how calmly – and how little – he communicates with her. «You don’t need to use a stern tone. The important thing is giving clear commands. If you give ambiguous, inconsistent signals and blabber on at the dog, it’ll soon stop listening to you,» he says. He then adds with a grin, «The same thing happens to me.»

On the money trail

Ten minutes later, Anora’s been walked and is ready for her next mission in the command centre, where Guggisberg has hidden some banknotes. In real life, these would usually be sought out in the case of a financial crime. He sends Anora off with a shout of «search!»

A few seconds later, the dog heads for a small cupboard. It’s locked, but she seems to have got wind of something in there. Guggisberg pulls open the sliding door, and Anora goes on sniffing. Happening upon a little cardboard box right at the back, she indicates she’s found something. I can literally feel the dog’s eagerness to tear open the container. But she resists the temptation.

Guggisberg pulls out the box, opens it, unfolds it a few times and retrieves the money from between two layers of cardboard. It’s unbelievable how good the sniffer dog’s nose is. «About a thousand times better than ours,» says Guggisberg and praises Anora. It’s now time for her to take a well-deserved lunch break.

Diara’s hyper focused. Once her search dog harness is on, her hind legs start trembling. I decide to ask an uncomfortable question: «Is police work dog-friendly?» «Absolutely,» Guggisberg says. «The trembling doesn’t mean she’s overwhelmed or afraid. Dogs of her breed want to work. When we’re on holiday, I sometimes even hide my wife to satisfy Diara’s need to be active. She’s itching to finally start searching.» Well then, off we go.

Guggisberg opens the bag containing the hat and pulls it over Diara’s snout. Her eyes widen, her nostrils flare. The dog and her handler stay like this for a few seconds. «Finding people is the most difficult job that search dogs are tasked with. We can’t condition them to a specific smell because the missing person’s is always unique. The only thing for it is to practice, practice, practice.»

Like Roger Eckert, Diara has already tracked down a number of people – and even saved lives. Take the case of a 94-year-old man who failed to return from a walk, for example. After sniffing the missing man’s undershirt, Diara led her handler up a steep path. «We were all certain the man couldn’t be up there, but we ended up finding him collapsed in a thorn bush. If we hadn’t found him, he probably would’ve frozen to death.»

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I love anything with four legs or roots - especially my shelter cats Jasper and Joy and my collection of succulents. My favourite things to do are stalking around with police dogs and cat coiffeurs on reportages or letting sensitive stories flourish in garden brockis and Japanese gardens. 


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