Official Site of the U.S. Air Force   Right Corner Banner
Join the Air Force

News > Three of MacDill's 'finest' retire after 26 deployments
 
Photos
Previous ImageNext Image
Homeward Bound
Conny and Jago, 6th Security Forces Squadron military working dogs, stand next to their handlers and new owners during their retirement ceremony at MacDill Air Force Base, Fla., July 12, 2012. Three military working dogs were retired. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Linzi Joseph)
Download HiRes
Three of MacDill's 'finest' retire after 26 deployments

Posted 7/12/2012 Email story   Print story

    


by Senior Airman Melissa Paradise
6th Mobility Wing Public Affairs


7/12/2012 - MACDILL AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. (AFNS) -- Retirement is a time to reflect upon years of dedicated service with pride. Today, July 12, three of MacDill's finest have reached this milestone.

Three military working dogs from the 6th Security Forces Squadron, Conny, Jago and Haris, hung up their leashes at Helton Hall in front of a captive audience made of Team MacDill members and civilian media.

The retirement process, which can be a long wait, is finally over for these three heroes who will now journey into their next chapter.

Conny, a 10 year old German shepherd, has deployed to Afghanistan twice and Iraq three times. She has also been tasked in support of 12 secret service missions.
Senior Airman Brandon Denton, a military working dog handler is fortunate enough to be able to adopt Conny, his partner of two years.

"She lived with me when we were deployed. It was a pretty crazy deployment. But at the end of the day she still wanted to play catch with me. She truly is my best friend" stated Denton.

Also retired was Jago, 10, who has been deployed to Afghanistan, Kyrgyzstan and Iraq. He has provided support to nine secret service missions. Jago will spend his retirement with his current handler, Senior Airman Brett Carson. The team has been together for eight months.  "I wanted to adopt Jago because he has given his entire life to military service and I wanted to be able to give him a nice retirement filled with leisure as well as a good home in which he will be loved" said Carson.

The adoption process, to include a medical clearance from the base veterinarian clinic and clearance from Lackland AFB took a total of five months. After that, Carson received the good news that he would be allowed to adopt his companion.

The third dog retired was Haris, 11, and the oldest of the three, has been deployed a total of five times to four countries. Unlike the rest, Haris will travel a little further to find his new home, all the way to Louisiana with retired Dr. Randel and Shelly Patty.

Randel, an Air Force Vietnam veteran, and his wife Shelly, have been adopting veteran dogs since President Clinton passed a law authorizing service dog adoption.

"They are very special animals and they do so much for the military so we want them to have a good retirement" said Shelly. "They go everywhere with us. Our grandkids love them. They are so loyal, giving and smart."

Haris is the Patty's fourth MWD.

The retirement ceremony was a bittersweet moment for the members of security forces. Although the overall feeling was joy, the reality sets in that they will truly be missed.  In the words of Tech Sgt. Michael Hendricks, 6th SFS kennel master, "In the end, they deserve it."



tabComments
No comments yet.  
Add a comment

 Inside AF.mil

ima cornerSearch

tabSubscribe AF.MIL
tabMore HeadlinesRSS feed 
Army UH-1H finds new home with Air Force

Academy cadets to conduct 'Flightline of the Future' research

Intel experts converge for 2012 GEOINT Symposium  1

AF training instructor responds to traffic accident  1

Air Force leaders salute Navy on 237th birthday  1

AFSPC commander speaks at 11th Annual Air Force IT Day event

Through Airmen's Eyes: U.K. Airman places in 61.2-mile ultra-marathon  1

Academy cyber competition team takes 1st at NYU event  1

Gen. Shelton convenes accident investigation

Airmen rally to help save lives  1

Lost Johnny Carson film found at March

Brig. Gen. Witham nominated as ANG deputy director

AFPC Airman: Don't forget, they're not all home

Muncy Honored With Second Highest Private Citizen Award

tabCommentaryRSS feed 
Standards? What standards?   3

First things first: Get your degrees in order  40


Site Map      Contact Us     Questions     Security and Privacy notice     E-publishing