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Eliminating Police Bias When Handling Drug-Sniffing Dogs

November 20, 2017 by www.npr.org Leave a Comment

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Officer Darrell Lobe of the Bothell, Wash. police department “proofs” a hidden-drugs test at the start of a K9 certification. The location of drugs in the vehicles was determined by rolling a die to prevent bias. Martin Kaste/NPR hide caption

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Martin Kaste/NPR

Officer Darrell Lobe of the Bothell, Wash. police department “proofs” a hidden-drugs test at the start of a K9 certification. The location of drugs in the vehicles was determined by rolling a die to prevent bias.

Martin Kaste/NPR

Seven years ago, a researcher named Lisa Lit published a study that she now calls “a real career-ender.”

On the surface, the study tested the abilities of fourteen certified sniffer dogs to find hidden “targets.” In reality, the dogs’ human handlers were also under the magnifying glass. They were led to believe there were hidden target scents present, when in fact there were none. Nevertheless, the dogs “alerted” to the scents multiple times — especially in locations where researchers had indicated a scent was likely.

“I think the findings were a little surprising,” Lit says. “I don’t think the number of incorrect responses was what anybody was really anticipating out of this study.”

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Police dogs searching for drugs sometimes “alert” for them when they’re not there. That raises questions about the influence of the dogs’ handlers. As NPR learned, there is now an effort by some in the training community to eliminate the influence of their handlers’ suspicions to make dog searches more fair.

Lit’s study made headlines in the U.S. and abroad , as it seemed to question the impartiality of police K9 teams. In most states, an alert by a certified drug-sniffing dog gives police the right to search your car; some cops jokingly refer to the dogs as “probable cause on four legs.” With this study, that probable cause looked shakier.

Dog trainers and handlers denounced the study and its methods, and Lit couldn’t get their cooperation for further research. Dr. Cynthia Otto, another researcher who runs the Penn Vet Working Dog Center at the University of Pennsylvania, recalls the backlash.

“At the time it was extremely contentious, mostly because it felt like people were duped,” Otto says. “That [the handlers] were kind of tricked into this and taken advantage of.”

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Fred Helfers observes a K9 certification test through a partially masked window, to avoid any possibility of influencing the outcome. Martin Kaste/NPR hide caption

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Martin Kaste/NPR

Fred Helfers observes a K9 certification test through a partially masked window, to avoid any possibility of influencing the outcome.

Martin Kaste/NPR

But now that some time has gone by, Otto says there are trainers and handlers who are willing to put those emotions behind them and look at the problem identified by the study: dogs are very good at reading humans.

“There is this elephant in the room, the human factors,” she says. “We have to grab onto that and address it, so that we can mitigate some of these effects.”

One organization trying to address handler bias is the Pacific Northwest Police Detection Dog Association . In the U.S., a drug-sniffing dog team — the dog and its handler — has to be periodically retested and certified, usually by one of the many regional K9 associations. Some groups have tougher testing methods than others; the PNWK9 has a method that aspires to scientific levels of impartiality.

“It’s a double-blind,” says Fred Helfers , the retired police K9 handler and trainer who designed the system. “No outside influence.”

In Helfers’ tests, nobody in the room knows where the drugs are hidden; not the handler, not even the test administrator. That’s to eliminate the possibility of someone unconsciously telegraphing signals to the dog as it gets close to the target.

The tests are also randomized. Ahead of time, Helfers spends hours rolling dice to determine in which suitcases or cars to hide the target drugs. By rolling dice, he avoids following any kind of pattern which handlers might try to guess, the way a student might try to guess the patterns of answers in a mutiple-choice exam.

Occasionally, the dice determine that there will be no drugs hidden at all — sometimes for several tests in a row. He recalls that happening at another certification event.

“There were some new teams that failed that sequence,” Helfers says. “Because they didn’t trust their dog.”

He says those handlers couldn’t get past their expectation that drugs should be there. “I think they ‘overworked’ the car. Instead of going around once or twice and trusting their dog and watching their dog work, maybe they’d seen something that wasn’t there,” Helfers says.

He hopes his double-blind testing approach will catch on more broadly. But it’s a tough sell. K9 handlers don’t like being told they might be unconsciously cueing their dogs; some don’t think it’s even possible.

And there are powerful incentives not to change how things are done, says Andy Falco, a former police K9 handler who now trains dogs and works as an expert witness for defense attorneys.

“All [police departments] care about is how many cars you’re pulling over, how much money is being seized because your dog alerted,” he says, referring to departments that use civil asset forfeiture to keep money and other property found in cars after a K9 alerts to the scent of drugs.

“They go, ‘It’s easy! All I gotta do is walk my dog around, and look for him to change his behavior slightly, and then we can go inside and sometimes we’ll find a million dollars and then we can seize it!'”

Does Falco think handlers are consciously cueing their dogs?

“I think in the beginning it’s subconscious, but at some point, you know, how hard do you want to work, right?”

Falco says the UC Davis study has put more pressure on police to show that their dog teams are unbiased. The study is often cited by the defense in drug cases, and he’s glad to see organizations such as the PNWK9 responding with more scientific certification methods.

But he’d like to see dog teams go further, by keeping detailed records on how often a dog alerts to a drug, but finds nothing. Some dog handlers do that; others say it’s not a fair method for judging a dog’s accuracy.

“There’s been cars that my dog’s hit on… and just because there wasn’t a product in it, doesn’t mean the dog can’t smell it,” says Gunnar Fulmer, a K9 officer with the Walla Walla Police Department. “[The drug odor] gets permeated in clothing, it gets permeated in the headliners in cars.”

Handlers also point out that scientific neutrality is not something you can reasonably expect during traffic stops, since police are trained to act on their suspicions.

“The dogs are mainly used to confirm what we already suspect,” says Fulmer. “When the dogs come out, about 99 percent of the time we get an alert. And it’s because we already know what’s in the car; we just need that confirmation to help us out with that.”

Still, the certification process developed by Fred Helfers may at least force K9 teams to prove they’re capable of searching for drugs in a neutral fashion. He says the tests serve as a reminder to handlers that they should trust their dogs — even when the dogs come up empty.

Filed Under: National police dogs drug, police dogs help drugs, police dogs sniffing out drugs, police dogs searching for drugs, police dogs trained to detect drugs can be used quizlet, best police drug dogs

Removing the trap of ‘father chance’

June 8, 2023 by koreajoongangdaily.joins.com Leave a Comment



Kim Hye-joon

The author is head of the Fathers Joining Together,a civic group aimed at establishing the right role of fathers.

As corruption allegations involving hiring the children of high-level government officials, including the secretary-general and deputy secretary-general of the National Election Commission (NEC) emerge, the country is riled up by the so-called “Father Chance.” Whenever a Father Chance contraversy erupts, I am more perplexed than anyone else, as I have been working for “rediscovery of roles and value of fathers.”

How have we come to use the uncomfortable term Father Chance for such unpleasant cases? Come to think of it, the existence of a mother is enough for children, but the father seems to have a different connotation. As fathers feel the silent pressure that their existence alone is not enough, they need to have “Plus Alpha.” For instance, when kids fight at a playground, they often say, “My dad is strong” or “My dad will scold you.”

In general, the primary factor for being a good mother is how much one loves her child rather than her social role. In contrast, the role and value of the father is not just how well they interact with children but also how strong and competent they are outside of the home. Unlike motherly love, the “Law of Power” seems to work on paternal love.

Therefore, many fathers in the world run around the jungle outside their homes for their families. I feel a lot of social pressure to be stronger and more competent. Perhaps because of this, people often say, “I would have done the same” or “Who can throw a stone at that person?” when something happens.

This was the case in the controversy over the father chance by high-level NEC officials and over the favor involving the children of former Justice Minister Cho Kuk. But I can say for sure that their selfish behavior for their own children is far from desirable paternal love. It is “Fake Paternal Love.”

Luigi Zoja, an Italian psychoanalyst who served as president of the International Association of Analytical Psychology, explained that the process of changing from male to father is a gateway for humans to advance from barbarism to intelligence. The act of a man once faithful to self-love to recognize a new life as a child and decide to take responsibility for parenting is quite a rational awakening and execution process.

In the Japanese movie “Like Father, Like Son” by Hirokazu Koreeda and in the Korean film “Chronicle of a Blood Merchant” based on Chinese novelist Yu Hua’s 1995 novel of the same title, true paternal love is depicted through a man being awakened to human intelligence. As seen here, paternal love is at the core of human intelligence that matures individual and communities.

In fact, there is also a group called “Fatherly Smile Mentor Group” organized to support dreams and future of the children from underprivileged families. They serve as “social fathers” to the unrelated children in difficult situations to practice true paternal love.

However, as the word Father Chance” is the main culprit of destroying individuals and communities in Korea, I am angry as a father that paternal love is undermined. True paternal love springs up from awakening, reflection and practice. It is a community virtue fostering citizenship and a sense of balance.

On the other hand, fake paternal love of Father Chance actually interferes with children’s future with fouls, expediency and hypocrisy. At the same time, it encroaches on the framework of the Korean community. Men with this fake paternal love should be strictly excluded from public office regardless of their ranks.

There is a reason why many people raged over the father chance. Those involved in the controversy are public servants, serving high-rank positions at the constitutional agency that organizes elections to protect democracy, the core of our community.

Even in private companies, people would question if children of CEOs are promoted to key positions without reasonable grounds. Moreover, public offices should have a different level of accountability. I don’t even need to argue that the civil servant hiring process should be fair. I hope Father Chance and fake paternal love will be eradicated to save normal fathers from being falsely stigmatized.

Translation by the Korea JoongAng Daily staff.

Filed Under: Uncategorized father chance, fathers, mothers, paternal love, trapping father elijah, what are the chances of getting pregnant after polyp removal

RBI focusing on taming inflation to help sustainable growth: ASSOCHAM

June 8, 2023 by economictimes.indiatimes.com Leave a Comment

Synopsis

The Reserve Bank of India’s decision to maintain benchmark interest rates at 6.5% was on expected lines and aligns with its focus on curbing inflation, according to the Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India.

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The Reserve Bank of India’s decision to keep the benchmark interest rates unchanged is on the expected lines, said Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India ( ASSOCHAM ) after RBI concluded its three day Monetary Policy Committee ( MPC ) meeting, adding that the focus of the monetary policy is clearly on further taming inflation for a stable growth.

Earlier today, RBI left its repo rate unchanged at 6.5 percent for the second consecutive meeting.

”While the Monetary Policy Committee remains focused on withdrawal of accommodation to further rein in inflation, we are co nfident that the RBI would ensure that adequate liquidity is maintained in the banking system and credit growth remains robust,” said ASSOCHAM Secretary General Deepak Sood.

He said, assessment as reflected in RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das ‘ statement, gives clear signals of revival in the investment sentiment despite global headwinds.

Das had earlier said, MPC will continue to take policy actions promptly and appropriately to keep inflation expectations firmly anchored. He also added, Domestic demand condition remains supportive of growth; rural demand on revival path.

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“Price stability coupled with push to growth are the twin catalysts for maintaining the momentum in the Indian economy. While RBI has projected GDP growth of 6.5 per cent for the FY’24, we may be in for a positive surprise for higher expansion if Monsoon is normal and well spread in the next three months,” Sood added.

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Mother Dairy cuts MRP of Dhara edible oils by Rs 10 per litre on global cues

June 8, 2023 by economictimes.indiatimes.com Leave a Comment

Synopsis

Last week, the Centre directed edible oil industry bodies to advise their members to further reduce the MRP of major edible oils by Rs 8-12 per litre with immediate effect.

Mother Dairy , which is a leading milk supplier in Delhi-NCR, on Thursday said it has reduced the maximum retail price (MRP) of edible oils sold under Dhara brand by Rs 10 per litre and the stocks with new rates will be available in the market from next week. The reduction in the MRP is in line with a fall in prices of edible oils in the global market , the company said.

Cooking oils are generally sold by retailers at a price below the MRP printed on the bottles/packets.

Last week, the Centre directed edible oil industry bodies to advise their members to further reduce the MRP of major edible oils by Rs 8-12 per litre with immediate effect.

“The maximum retail price (MRP) of all variants of Dhara edible oils is being reduced by Rs 10 per litre on account of the continued decline in edible oil prices internationally and better availability of domestic crops such as mustard,” a company spokesperson said.

The revised MRP stocks are slated to hit the market within a week, the spokesperson added.

The new rate of Dhara refined soyabean oil will be Rs 140 per litre, while Dhara refined rice bran oil MRP has been cut down to Rs 160 per litre.

The new MRP of Dhara refined vegetable oil will now be Rs 200 per litre.

Dhara kachi ghani mustard oil will be available at a MRP of Rs 160 per litre, while Dhara mustard oil at Rs 158.

The MRP of Dhara refined sunflower oil will now be Rs 150 per litre.

Dhara groundnut oil will be sold at a MRP of Rs 230 per litre, said Mother Dairy, which sells more than 30 lakh litres of milk per day in Delhi-NCR. Besides dairy products and edible oils, it is also into marketing of fruits and vegetables.

On June 2, Food Secretary Sanjeev Chopra held a meeting with the leading industry representatives, including Solvent Extraction Association of India (SEA) and Indian Vegetable Oil Producers’ Association (IVPA) to discuss further reduction in the retail prices of edible oils amidst a continued fall in the global prices.

“Some companies which have not reduced their prices and their MRP is higher than other brands have also been advised to reduce their prices,” the food ministry had said.

The associations were advised to take up the issue with their members immediately and ensure that the MRP of major edible oils to be reduced further by Rs 8-12 per litre, with immediate effect, the ministry had said in a statement.

The industry had informed that the global prices of different edible oils have fallen by USD 150-200 per tonne in the last two months.

They told that manufactures have reduced the MRP and will further reduce it shortly.

However, the association’s representative told that there is an element of time lag for reflection in the retail markets and the retail prices are soon expected to come down further.

A major importer of edible oils, India imported cooking oils worth Rs 1.57 lakh crore during 2021-22 marketing year (November-October).

It buys palm oil from Malaysia and Indonesia while soyabean oil is being imported from Argentina and Brazil.

India imports more than 50 per cent of its total edible oil requirements.

Edible oil import bill rose 34 per cent to Rs 1.57 lakh crore in 2021-22 marketing year, while in volume terms, it rose 6.85 per cent to 140.3 lakh tonnes.

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The e-collar ban is based on ideology, not reality

June 6, 2023 by www.telegraph.co.uk Leave a Comment

Every public document nowadays says it is “evidence-based”, but too often, the scientific research evidence involved appears pre-organised to produce a political result. So it is with the attempt by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) to ban e-collars for dogs .

Today, from the sharp-toothed front line, comes a letter to the Prime Minister from 441 sheep farmers in England. Led by the aptly named Phil Stocker, chief executive of the National Sheep Association, they protest at the ban. They say e-collars can be “an effective training aid, and in many cases an alternative to having to have a dog put down”.

As any country-dweller knows, attacks by dogs on livestock are a problem that exploded during Covid and remains severe. Defra’s own estimate is that half a million dogs are trained with e-collars. If this training were banned, next February’s lambing would soon show the dire effects. Unfortunately, taking a dog for a walk on a lead is no guarantee of good behaviour because, in nearly half the cases, leads are slipped.

Advocates of e-collars do not say they suit all cases; but, for dogs who are naturally predatory and/or behave badly, they do teach the necessary lesson. The phrase “short, sharp shock” was once well known as a remedy for youth crime. The concept, in its most literal form, was not suited to human beings but, after three or four applications, it does teach dogs a permanent aversion. This means that thousands can run free without harm to others. That is surely much better than canine capital punishment.

If the collars are banned, we shall be in a strange situation. Farmers may put up electric fences for cattle or sheep which deliver shocks of up to 15,000 millijoules (mJ), whereas a dog’s e-collar – current maximum, 5mJ – will be illegal. In the RSPCA’s 2021 figures of reported cruelty to animals, there were 1,094 killings, 38,087 abandonments, but not one e-collar incident.

It is borderline insane for Defra to pay so little attention to the reality of death by dog, but that is what happens when ministers and officials pass their days in meetings with pressure groups.


Birds and oil can live together

Sir Keir Starmer’s upcoming answer to this country’s energy needs seems to be to prevent all new exploration for oil and gas in British waters . This will be announced in Scotland later this month. Not surprisingly, the prospect has upset the normally Labour-supporting trade unions, the GMB and Unite, whose members work in both fields. They would lose jobs if the proposed policy were enacted.

There will be much more argument about this, but what interests me right now is the reaction of the Campaign to Protect Rural England and the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds. They issued a statement calling on Sir Keir to “stand firm on Labour’s policy of no new oil and gas development”, preferring money spent on “nature-positive renewables” etc.

Obviously both organisations care about what happens to our environment, but is it right for a charity to promote a named party’s policy, particularly over such a wide-ranging, controversial and highly political issue? There must be millions, your columnist included, who are interested in the welfare of rural England and of birds but do not want the charities who share those aims to fight partisan wars with the money they raise tax-free in the name of the public good.

Would rural England or rare birds automatically be better off with more on-shore windfarms than with North Sea oil or gas fields? As with the e-collar controversy (see above), zealotry and politics seem to trump reason and impartiality.


The first deserve the naming rights

Before I forget for a year, please let me reassert a pedantry which the media increasingly ignore: the race run last Saturday is not “the Epsom Derby”. It is “The Derby”.

All other Derbys (should that be “Derbies”?) have a qualifier in their name – the Irish Derby, the Kentucky Derby. Various football and rugby matches are sometimes described as a “Derby” (or should that be “derby”?). But the race run at Epsom was the first and remains the greatest. Like the Grand National, it needs only its name, and is always thus referred to in conversation.

It is worth sticking to these things. The lack of a geographical or national prefix often gives a clue to an early origin. Thus Britain’s oldest daily newspaper, The Times , should not be called “The London Times”, though it often is in foreign reports, whereas The New York Times should be so-called, because that is what its masthead says.

It is to do with who got there first. For that reason, Britain is the only country in the world whose postage stamps do not state where they come from, and the United States is the only nation in which none of its email addresses include the country’s initials or abbreviation.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Therese Coffey, Opinion, Comment, Dogs, Epsom Derby, News, Sheep, Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (DEFRA), Charles Moore, Keir Starmer, perceptually-based foveated virtual reality, what toy was banned at a number of u.s. military bases in 1999, which toy was banned from a u.s. nsa base in the 1990s, markerless based augmented reality, helen joyce when ideology meets reality, miami based reality shows, de-ideologized reality

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