k9 search dogs
K9 is another term for dogs. Some police use dogs abilities for search and rescue, finding lost people and smelling contraband.
Yes, parking lots are accessible to the public, and therefore subject to the rules regarding "plain sight" evidence. The dog is a tool that the officer is using to check for illegal activity, such as drug use or loitering. No arrest has to take place to justify a patrol going through an open parking lot. United States Supreme Court ruled that the use of a K9 to "sniff" the outside of a vehicle is not considered a search under the guidelines of the 4th amendment. A vehicle parked in a parking lot has no expectation of privacy. Any K9 officer could run a K9 around any vehicle in the parking lot without any other cause other than he wanted to. It is not a search, therefore search and seizure rules do not apply. The vehicle is parked in a public place where any other person would have access to the air surrounding the vehicles. Same thing goes for the officer. If the K9 alerts on your parked vehicle, it is probable cause to seek a warrant to search and hold the vehicle until such is obtained.
Once a properly trained working K9 indicates something illegal on you or your property, that is considered probable cause.
k9 skill
pitbull is stronger than k9
Wolfs are alpha of K9.All other K9 are subgroups of wolfs.
it is mostly used as a family pet but also a police dog, search and rescue K9 unit and other law inforcement jobs
K9 stands for the ratio of strike outs per 9 innings pitched.
all dogs are considered canines or k9 as you put it
Titanium, is used so when they bite the natural k9 teeth will not break in bite force, holding on and at impact.So Titanium is the correct answer.
The term "K9" is typically used in reference to police or military dogs, not guide dogs.Added:Actually, the term "K9" comes from the Latin word for dog, canine. I think it would be fine if you referred to a guide dog as a K9. But it would sound a little redundant.