tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8437901534161780164.post5279648293743957355..comments2024-03-26T03:06:15.580-04:00Comments on Dog Law Reporter: Explosives Detection Canine Teams Increase at Airports and Rail Systems, but Coverage Is Still ThinJohn Ensmingerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02840129911400528572noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8437901534161780164.post-89186067413916276082010-10-26T04:29:30.391-04:002010-10-26T04:29:30.391-04:00Your article raises the difficulty, we, as a canin...Your article raises the difficulty, we, as a canine company, face everyday.<br />It has been proved many times by many unbiased entities that the best explosive detector is a dog nose yet many security officers prefer machines - something that beeps or light a bulb.<br />The EU has made a giant step with this issue by regulating (approving) the usage of sniffer dogs as a primary screening method in airport especially for cargo screening, hold baggage and even passengers.<br />If you think about it you have more pros than cons - high detection rate, no radiation, minor false alarm rate, no privacy issues.<br />Question is will we see more and more explosive detection dogs in airport - time will tell.DiagNose K9http://diag-nose.com/explosive_detections_dogs.htmlnoreply@blogger.com