Local News & NorthwestDecember 9, 2023

Ragnar can now be loaned out to perform drug searches outside Moscow Police’s immediate jurisdiction

Moscow police sergeant Ryan Snyder plays with his K-9 Ragnar outside of the Moscow police department’s headquarters in July.
Moscow police sergeant Ryan Snyder plays with his K-9 Ragnar outside of the Moscow police department’s headquarters in July.Jordan Opp/Daily News
Moscow police sergeant Ryan Snyder plays with his K-9 Ragnar outside of the Moscow police department’s headquarters in July.
Moscow police sergeant Ryan Snyder plays with his K-9 Ragnar outside of the Moscow police department’s headquarters in July.Jordan Opp/Daily News
Corporal Ryan Snyder prepares to introduce Ragnar, a drug detecting K-9, to an audience in October, 2022, during a drug awareness presentation from the Moscow Police Department in honor of Red Ribbon Week at Moscow High School.
Corporal Ryan Snyder prepares to introduce Ragnar, a drug detecting K-9, to an audience in October, 2022, during a drug awareness presentation from the Moscow Police Department in honor of Red Ribbon Week at Moscow High School.Zach Wilkinson/Daily News
Cpl. Ryan Snyder and K-9 officer Ragnar, of the Moscow Police Department, mingle with a crowd in August, 2022, during Moscow’s National Night Out event on Main Street.
Cpl. Ryan Snyder and K-9 officer Ragnar, of the Moscow Police Department, mingle with a crowd in August, 2022, during Moscow’s National Night Out event on Main Street.Zach Wilkinson/Daily News
Ragnar
Ragnar

The Latah County Sheriff’s Office can now get an assist from Moscow Police’s drug-sniffing dog during traffic stops if necessary.

Sheriff Richie Skiles “deputized” K9 Ragnar recently to commemorate a partnership between the Sheriff’s Office and the Moscow Police Department.

“It’s just another tool at our disposal,” said Sheriff’s Capt. Shane Anderson.

Anderson said Ragnar still belongs to the city, but the Sheriff’s Office can call on it for drug searches in greater Latah County if it is available.

Ragnar has been with the Moscow Police Department since 2022.

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Anderson said it is still the Sheriff’s Office goal to have a K9 of its own in the future. He said the area has seen a huge increase in fentanyl use and overdoses in recent years and a K9 would provide them a tool to address the problem.

“They’re mixing it into heroin and meth and other things, which makes it a lot more potent,” he said.

During a February community presentation in Troy, Skiles said he would like to have more staff members so his department can be proactive in preventing the rise in fentanyl in the community instead of “just going from call to call.”

Anderson said that before the Sheriff’s Office can employ its own K9, it must sort out the implications of a recent Idaho Supreme Court ruling that a police drug sniffing dog trespassed and conducted an illegal search by putting its paws on a Mountain Home man’s vehicle.

According to an Oct. 11 Idaho Statesman report, the U.S. Supreme Court decided not to weigh in on this case, which means the Idaho Supreme Court’s ruling will stand.

Kuipers can be reached at akuipers@dnews.com.

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