PRISON DOG PROGRAMS ~ HELPING PRISONERS TO HELP OTHERS
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
PRISON DOG FANS... SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT
Sometimes our little space becomes the center of our world, thinking that the organization we are working with, the prison dog program we wish to start or have started or we become frustrated if someone shows up late, or makes us angry, or hurts us in any way then we forget the larger picture of life and how little we are compared to the whole world. Try hard to repair damaged relationships, train dogs to help others, give people a hand up, find avenues of hope you can spread because our life is very short compared to the rest of the world.
Monday, September 2, 2013
PAX, WENT TO THE WASHINGTON STATE CORRECTIONAL CENTER FOR WOMEN TO PREPARE HIM FOR HIS NEW JOB AS A PEACEMAKER AND A SERVICE DOG
The Washington State Correctional Center for Women is the first prison dog program in the United States where inmates are training dogs to help the handicapped. It was started in 1981. The Prison Pet Partnership Program finds their dogs in the Humane Societies and Animal Shelters of the Seattle area. They have a 28 run dog kennel as well as a grooming room where the inmates are boarding and grooming outside dogs. There is also a cat room. When we can start programs where it benefits the community, help the inmates learn skills that they can use when they get out of prison, and helps all those who volunteer their time to help the program, then it becomes a program that is making a difference. I brought Pax to the prison for more training since these inmates have more training skills. Here are a few pictures. The program needs supplies and I am trying to help them find what they need. If you want to help them, contact me: srpauline@bpofcourage.org Prison Pet Partnership Web Page.. http://www.prisonpetpartnership.org/
Pax Going To The Fair Before He Went To Prison |
On the airplane going to Prison, Pax met a young girl who had a doll. Since Pax was under the seat, she put her doll next to pax. He reached over and gave the doll a kiss then went back to sleep. |
The Prison Pet Partnership Program has been in existance since 1981. They welcome you to know more about them. |
Pax arrived in prison and had several people meet and greet him and his friend Joey who also flew to Washington State. |
Pax had fun playing with the wood dog that was holding the welcome sign |
Pax is 14 months old when this picture was taken. He is growing up |
Wednesday, July 3, 2013
OSHKOSH CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTION PawsForward PRISON DOG PROGRAM IN WISCONSIN
OSCI prison in Wisconsin has over two thousand inmates. I am impressed by the dedication and hard work that Warden Judy Smith and her staff has made to help make the PawsForward prison dog program a success. The inmates are training dogs to help the blind as well as people who have physical disabilities for Occupaws Guide Dog school based in Madison, Wisconsin.
A select group of inmates are allowed to take their dogs to visit the mental health unit at the prison which helps bring healing by the visiting dogs as well as it gives the inmate handler the opportunity to help someone else. Healing comes about by taking responsibility for their crime and by doing community projects that help focus on helping others. The PawsForward program at OSCI is helping to do this.
The prison dog programs help to create a focus on helping others which is needed in order to change prospectives and follow a different pathway. It gives the inmates an opportunity to give back to our community. I salute Oshkosh Correctional, Occupaws and all the hard working volunteers, staff and inmates at the prison who are making the program a success.
A select group of inmates are allowed to take their dogs to visit the mental health unit at the prison which helps bring healing by the visiting dogs as well as it gives the inmate handler the opportunity to help someone else. Healing comes about by taking responsibility for their crime and by doing community projects that help focus on helping others. The PawsForward program at OSCI is helping to do this.
The prison dog programs help to create a focus on helping others which is needed in order to change prospectives and follow a different pathway. It gives the inmates an opportunity to give back to our community. I salute Oshkosh Correctional, Occupaws and all the hard working volunteers, staff and inmates at the prison who are making the program a success.
Sr Pauline's service Dog Reni came to visit. It shows that dogs that are 'image' dogs can be very sweet and loving as Reni is
Sr Pauline's dog Joey who is in training as a service dog. Small dogs can retrieve or being a hearing dog.
Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Refurbished Pets/ Michigan Humane Society and Coldwater Prison Compex
Founded in 2007 RPSM has made a serious effort to effectively aid in the reduction of euthanasia rates at many animal shelters. In 2008, the RPSM Correctional Companion Program began. In a partnership with the Coldwater Prison Complex, RPSM endeavors to find homes for dogs in shelters that would otherwise be euthanized. Dogs selected for the Companion Program are carefully screened for temperament, trainability, and adoptability. They are fully vaccinated, spayed or neutered prior to enrollment in the program. Once they arrive at the complex, they are assigned to specially trained inmates who are responsible for their training and day to day care. Upon completion of the program, the dogs are ready to receive a canine good citizen certificate (CGC) and available for adoption into an approved home.
Thursday, May 2, 2013
Tuesday, April 23, 2013
Sunday, January 13, 2013
HEALING HEARTS PRISON DOG PROGRAM
Heeling Hearts is a therapeutic and skills training program for incarcerated women. It is an animal welfare program for the dogs who are rescued, trained, and adopted. The program is a response to the unique needs of the women and a response to the high number of homeless dogs in Cibola County. The program is modeled after established prison dog programs with demonstrated successes.
For more information please visit http://www.heelingheartsnm.org
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
~PAWS FORWARD PRISON DOG PROGRAM ~
OSHKOSH CORRECTIONAL CENTER OSHKOSH WISCONSIN
OSHKOSH CORRECTIONAL CENTER OSHKOSH WISCONSIN
Starting a prison dog program these days is far harder than the first one I started in 1981 at the Women's prison in Washington State. After several meetings with the Warden we were able to secure a starting day for a three month trial to see how the inmates, dogs and staff did in this unique program. The prison was taking a risk since there were no other prisons doing a program like this but they were willing to try.
The first program has been in operation 30 years and they have a boarding and grooming inside the prison for dogs out in the community.
The Oshkosh program took a year to start, many delays to give us time to develop solid protocols to make sure that when the program did start, everything was written out so it could start on firm ground. This helped to build success faster. My non profit organization Pathways To Hope has always focused on helping other worthwhile and hard working programs start prison programs so they can place more dogs to help the blind and disabled or save unwanted dogs from the animal shelters.
After meeting Barb Schultze of Occupaws Guide Dog School in Madison Wisconsin, learning more about her program, I liked what I saw and decided to help her start a prison dog program which would help her place more dogs to help the blind. Realizing the difficulty it is to start a program, I committed myself for the long duration it would take to get this program in place. Knowing the degree of difficulty it would be, it was very hard for me but at the same time, I knew all the people it would help if the program started. This realization helped me keep going. With Barb and her husband Mark, as well as the many giving people who donated the needed supplies and finding the right people to make this program start to bloom both inside and out of the prison, was a blessing.
Warden Judy Smith of the Oshkosh Correctional Center is an outstanding warden that wants to see in her institution programs develop that help teach life skills so when the inmate did return to the community they could see that there are options for them, giving them more potential to succeed..The prison dog programs teach the inmates how to take care of something... to be responsible, to have compassion, respect for other people and animals... as well as to learn how to train the dog in positive ways to help others who have a disability and could benefit having a special dog that will assist them. Warden Smith allowed us to start the PAWS FORWARD Prison Dog Program at the Oshkosh Correctional Institution and it is growing into a well ordered and beneficial program.. If the program doesn't have the support of the Warden, it makes it much more difficult to start.
After working and developing many programs around the country, I believe that the Oshkosh program has the potential to be one of the most outstanding, educational and training program that will benefit the inmates, dogs, the blind, disabled and anyone associated with the program. There is a team of twelve volunteers , lead by Capt Beckie and Officer Karen that work inside the prison that make sure that the program is running smoothly. They are excellent in helping with labeling, documenting all the supplies that we have sent in and they have organised the routine of the outside people who come in to help educate the inmates in training and dog care.
After working and developing many programs around the country, I believe that the Oshkosh program has the potential to be one of the most outstanding, educational and training program that will benefit the inmates, dogs, the blind, disabled and anyone associated with the program. There is a team of twelve volunteers , lead by Capt Beckie and Officer Karen that work inside the prison that make sure that the program is running smoothly. They are excellent in helping with labeling, documenting all the supplies that we have sent in and they have organised the routine of the outside people who come in to help educate the inmates in training and dog care.
Brenda Cirricione from Oshkosh is the director of training and organizer of the volunteers. There is a great team of volunteer trainers, groomers and socializers who have made the commitment to help. Brenda and her volunteers are doing an excellent job. Having so many good people to help the Oshkosh program is wonderful.
S.K.Y. has left a new comment on your post "~PAWS FORWARD PRISON DOG PROGRAM ~ OSHKOSH CORRE...":
Sister Pauline,
I'm a volunteer trainer with the new Oshkosh program, and appreciate the tremendous time and effort you made, along with the Schultzes, to get the program started. As you mentioned, Captain Becky and Officer Karen have also devoted a lot of work to keeping the program running smoothly.
I just did an all-day clicker training workshop at the prison yesterday and was so impressed with the progress of the inmates and their dogs. Some have been working with their dogs for about 4 weeks, while one inmate's dog was delivered a few minutes before the workshop started. A couple of other inmates borrowed guide dog trainees from trainers. No matter whether they'd just met the dog or had been training it for a month, all the inmates were genuinely caring and affectionate with the dogs, and are using all positive training methods.
I'm happy to be part of a program that benefits the inmates (by giving them a way to help others; and also for improved career prospects later), the dogs, and the future blind or disabled recipients of the dogs.
Great work, Sister Pauline. You're amazing!
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
Washington State Prison Dog and Cat Programs
In 1981 I started a program where inmates are training dogs for the handicapped. Unwanted dogs from the humane society are found that had the potential to become good service dogs. Since this first program started there are now programs in all of Washington State's prisons.. ten prisons have a dog program and two have a cat program. I went to visit four of these prisons and was impressed with the dedication and committment of the inmates who were doing a good job. Here are a few pictures.
Now there are prison dog programs all over the United States and in other countries. It helps teach the inmates how to become 'other' centered as well as to bring meaning to their own suffering. In order to change, it must be done with love. People and animals respond to love more than hate or anger. People need to be responsible for their crime but also give the oppertunity to change. Giving inmates a chance to give back to others is an oppertunity to learn a new life. Not all change but many do and as a concerned person, I want to try my best to help make this a better world.
I hope other prisons will think about putting a prison dog or cat program in their institution. The cat program is where the inmates socialize abandoned cats to make them more adoptable. Saving dogs, cats and inmates help make this a better society that we live in. One person changed is one person who will do something to give back and becomes a part of that positive ripple effect that moves out into the world to reach others.
Monday, July 2, 2012
ICAN PRISON DOG PROGRAMS http://www.icandog.org/
On May 11th during a presentation to ICAN supporters, the men at Plainfield Correctional Facility who train for ICAN demonstrated that even with less than a year of canine training, all of them are capable dog trainers and several of them have skills that make them some of the best trainers in the Indianapolis area. As they ran their dogs in training through their behaviors and skills for the audience, it was obvious just how much time and effort and heart the men had put into helping the dogs reach their potential.
Saturday, June 30, 2012
PRISONERS TRAIN BOMB AND DRUG SNIFFING DOGS IN PRISON
PROGRAM IN NEW YORK
~ PROGRAM IN FLORIDA ~ BAY COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY IN PANAMA CITY, has been collaborating with Auburn University to provide training for dogs destined to become bomb-sniffing and explosive-sniffing dogs. The program lets a few of the well behaved inmates train a dog through the beginning stages until it leaves for Auburn University. The dogs live with the inmates in their cells and are by their side from 4:30 a.m. when they wake up until 10:30 when they go to sleep. PHOTOS BY ANDREW JOHNSON
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ~ -------------------- POLICE DOGS REARED IN AN UNLIKELY KENNEL: NORTH FL. PRISON Pepper shows off her play ball during training at the Gadsden Correctional Facility in Quincy, Fla., Dec. 23, 2008, 2008. The Gadsden program is one of a handful launched in recent years to train and prepare dogs for advanced training and use by law enforcement. By: By JESSICA GRESKO Associated Press Writer | JCFloridan.com Published: January 28, 2009 Updated: January 28, 2009 - 9:55 PM » Comments | Post a Comment QUINCY, Fla. (AP) — Casey West says "search," and her black Lab, Oscar, charges at the command toward six plastic plant pots lined up on the floor of this north Florida prison. The dog dashes past the first four pots, skids on the concrete near pot No. 5, then doubles back to knock over pot No. 4 with his nose, revealing a towel doused with a sweet scent he has been trained to detect. "Yeah, yeah. Woo-hoo!" West shouts as she tussles playfully with Oscar, his tail wagging. Behind her, more than two dozen women inmates at Gadsden Correctional Institute burst into applause. They know the drill. All these inmates raise and train bomb-sniffing and scent detection dogs. A number of prisons ready service and companion dogs for the blind and disabled, though programs training dogs for law enforcement are newer. Gadsden is one of three private prisons in Florida and Georgia that have together raised nearly 100 dogs since 2005. The dogs go to Auburn University in Alabama for specialized training, then on to sniff for explosives and chemicals with sheriff's offices, the Coast Guard and the Department of Homeland Security. The dogs can also be trained to sniff out drugs, and four of the animals were tapped for explosives-sniffing detail for President Barack Obama's inauguration. The dogs stay with the inmates 24 hours a day, even sleeping in crates beside inmates' bunk beds. That commitment has meant success rates for dogs raised in prisons at about four times that of dogs raised by a family on the outside, according to Jeanne Brock, a senior instructor at Auburn's Canine Detection Training Center. The program has been so successful that another one at a Florida youth facility is to start this year, and Auburn now exclusively uses dogs raised by prisoners rather than from families or other sources. And it's not easy to get into the program. Prisoners chosen to train dogs can have almost any conviction — from murder to embezzlement — as long as they have a clean disciplinary record. They also must have two years left on their sentences so they can devote a full year to raising a dog. While prison has been good for the dogs, the dogs have been good for prisoners. At Gadsden, Heather Adams opened a photo album to show the two dogs she has raised. There's a shot of Adams wearing a Santa hat beside her second dog Mack, whom she called "Mack-a-Doodle" and chokes up when talking about. And there is one of her with her first dog, Foose, a chocolate Lab who went on to receive advanced training in detecting explosives on humans. When she heard Foose was deemed fit for the specialized training, Adams said, "I felt like my kid got into Harvard." West, 29, said she wouldn't mind if her dog goes on to detect drugs even though a drug conviction landed her in prison. In fact, she said, prison gave her a second chance, so sending someone else to prison might just be helping them. "I feel like I'm making amends. It feels therapeutic," she said of raising Oscar in Gadsden's 3-year-old program. And 24-year-old Ashley Chaganis, with her first dog Que, said the program has made her more aware of her feelings. "For the past 10 years of my life I haven't really cared about anything," said Chaganis, who's serving 10 years for robbery. Training the dogs — all Labradors — keeps the inmates busy learning problem-solving and teamwork, said Sandra Sexton, who oversees the program at Gadsden, a women's minimum- and medium-security prison for about 1,500 inmates. Sexton's program has raised 15 dogs since starting in 2005 as a way to teach inmates new skills that will help them reintegrate into society. The inmates say the responsibility of raising a dog has made them less self-involved, less depressed and even less violent. "We're all in prison because we were selfish in some way. Having a dog in here has conditioned me not to be selfish," said Wyn McDonald, 38, now raising her third dog as she nears the end of an eight-year sentence for DUI manslaughter. Prisoners take care of the dogs from eight weeks to about 1 year old. The canines are then sent to Auburn for about five more months of training before being sent out on duty. The trained dogs can cost $10,000 each. Training the dogs behind razor wire has its challenges. Other inmates can be rude, heckling the handlers as they pick up after their dogs. Occasionally the dogs must be taken off prison grounds to experience road traffic, malls and sporting events. And saying goodbye can be the hardest moment, even if the inmates know their dogs have big tasks ahead. "A lot of these inmates have never been loved, have never loved something," said Sharon Gavin, who oversees the scent-detection dog programs for Corrections Corporation of America, the Nashville, Tenn., company that runs the prisons in Florida and Georgia where such dogs are raised. The inmates work is getting noticed by the law enforcement officers who benefit from it. Tracy Turner, an Amtrak police officer who worked with her muscular yellow Lab, Holt, 12 hours daily to prepare for the inauguration, said she knows what she'd say if she met the inmate who raised her dog. "Thank you," she said. "You did a great job." -------__---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRISONERS IN JAIL TRAIN BOMB SNIFFING DOGS In an interesting turn of events, prison inmates are being used in a pilot program designed to train future law enforcement officers; inmates at the In an interesting turn of events, prison inmates are being used in a pilot program designed to train future law enforcement officers. Inmates at the Panama City- Bay County jail will help train two future bomb-sniffing dogs. The two Labradors, named Pancho and Peyton, are still puppies so they require a lot of attention. Dakota Catt, one of three inmates chosen to participate in the program, said, “It’s a 24/7 job. They live beside our bunks. We live with them every single day. They’re in here with us.” Prison officials said the three individuals were chosen due to their limited criminal record and the fact that they did not have a violent history. “They’re inmates that are really considered trustees and somebody who can be trusted to handle a dog that is very valuable,” said Warden Rick Anglin. Every day the inmates train the Labrador puppies in an outdoor play area. “They could be working to look for drugs or explosives,” said Sharon Gavin the K-9 Program Director. The program is funded by Auburn University which will eventually take custody of the pups after a year for more specialized training in bomb and drug detection. Joseph Leberte, another of the three chosen to help raise the dogs, said he was grateful for the opportunity. “I really appreciate the chance that they’ve given me to do this so it’s just really rewarding and I appreciate it,” said inmate Joseph Leberte. Prison officials hope the program will continue and they will have the chance to raise more dogs.
~ PROGRAM IN FLORIDA ~ BAY COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY IN PANAMA CITY, has been collaborating with Auburn University to provide training for dogs destined to become bomb-sniffing and explosive-sniffing dogs. The program lets a few of the well behaved inmates train a dog through the beginning stages until it leaves for Auburn University. The dogs live with the inmates in their cells and are by their side from 4:30 a.m. when they wake up until 10:30 when they go to sleep. PHOTOS BY ANDREW JOHNSON
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ~ -------------------- POLICE DOGS REARED IN AN UNLIKELY KENNEL: NORTH FL. PRISON Pepper shows off her play ball during training at the Gadsden Correctional Facility in Quincy, Fla., Dec. 23, 2008, 2008. The Gadsden program is one of a handful launched in recent years to train and prepare dogs for advanced training and use by law enforcement. By: By JESSICA GRESKO Associated Press Writer | JCFloridan.com Published: January 28, 2009 Updated: January 28, 2009 - 9:55 PM » Comments | Post a Comment QUINCY, Fla. (AP) — Casey West says "search," and her black Lab, Oscar, charges at the command toward six plastic plant pots lined up on the floor of this north Florida prison. The dog dashes past the first four pots, skids on the concrete near pot No. 5, then doubles back to knock over pot No. 4 with his nose, revealing a towel doused with a sweet scent he has been trained to detect. "Yeah, yeah. Woo-hoo!" West shouts as she tussles playfully with Oscar, his tail wagging. Behind her, more than two dozen women inmates at Gadsden Correctional Institute burst into applause. They know the drill. All these inmates raise and train bomb-sniffing and scent detection dogs. A number of prisons ready service and companion dogs for the blind and disabled, though programs training dogs for law enforcement are newer. Gadsden is one of three private prisons in Florida and Georgia that have together raised nearly 100 dogs since 2005. The dogs go to Auburn University in Alabama for specialized training, then on to sniff for explosives and chemicals with sheriff's offices, the Coast Guard and the Department of Homeland Security. The dogs can also be trained to sniff out drugs, and four of the animals were tapped for explosives-sniffing detail for President Barack Obama's inauguration. The dogs stay with the inmates 24 hours a day, even sleeping in crates beside inmates' bunk beds. That commitment has meant success rates for dogs raised in prisons at about four times that of dogs raised by a family on the outside, according to Jeanne Brock, a senior instructor at Auburn's Canine Detection Training Center. The program has been so successful that another one at a Florida youth facility is to start this year, and Auburn now exclusively uses dogs raised by prisoners rather than from families or other sources. And it's not easy to get into the program. Prisoners chosen to train dogs can have almost any conviction — from murder to embezzlement — as long as they have a clean disciplinary record. They also must have two years left on their sentences so they can devote a full year to raising a dog. While prison has been good for the dogs, the dogs have been good for prisoners. At Gadsden, Heather Adams opened a photo album to show the two dogs she has raised. There's a shot of Adams wearing a Santa hat beside her second dog Mack, whom she called "Mack-a-Doodle" and chokes up when talking about. And there is one of her with her first dog, Foose, a chocolate Lab who went on to receive advanced training in detecting explosives on humans. When she heard Foose was deemed fit for the specialized training, Adams said, "I felt like my kid got into Harvard." West, 29, said she wouldn't mind if her dog goes on to detect drugs even though a drug conviction landed her in prison. In fact, she said, prison gave her a second chance, so sending someone else to prison might just be helping them. "I feel like I'm making amends. It feels therapeutic," she said of raising Oscar in Gadsden's 3-year-old program. And 24-year-old Ashley Chaganis, with her first dog Que, said the program has made her more aware of her feelings. "For the past 10 years of my life I haven't really cared about anything," said Chaganis, who's serving 10 years for robbery. Training the dogs — all Labradors — keeps the inmates busy learning problem-solving and teamwork, said Sandra Sexton, who oversees the program at Gadsden, a women's minimum- and medium-security prison for about 1,500 inmates. Sexton's program has raised 15 dogs since starting in 2005 as a way to teach inmates new skills that will help them reintegrate into society. The inmates say the responsibility of raising a dog has made them less self-involved, less depressed and even less violent. "We're all in prison because we were selfish in some way. Having a dog in here has conditioned me not to be selfish," said Wyn McDonald, 38, now raising her third dog as she nears the end of an eight-year sentence for DUI manslaughter. Prisoners take care of the dogs from eight weeks to about 1 year old. The canines are then sent to Auburn for about five more months of training before being sent out on duty. The trained dogs can cost $10,000 each. Training the dogs behind razor wire has its challenges. Other inmates can be rude, heckling the handlers as they pick up after their dogs. Occasionally the dogs must be taken off prison grounds to experience road traffic, malls and sporting events. And saying goodbye can be the hardest moment, even if the inmates know their dogs have big tasks ahead. "A lot of these inmates have never been loved, have never loved something," said Sharon Gavin, who oversees the scent-detection dog programs for Corrections Corporation of America, the Nashville, Tenn., company that runs the prisons in Florida and Georgia where such dogs are raised. The inmates work is getting noticed by the law enforcement officers who benefit from it. Tracy Turner, an Amtrak police officer who worked with her muscular yellow Lab, Holt, 12 hours daily to prepare for the inauguration, said she knows what she'd say if she met the inmate who raised her dog. "Thank you," she said. "You did a great job." -------__---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRISONERS IN JAIL TRAIN BOMB SNIFFING DOGS In an interesting turn of events, prison inmates are being used in a pilot program designed to train future law enforcement officers; inmates at the In an interesting turn of events, prison inmates are being used in a pilot program designed to train future law enforcement officers. Inmates at the Panama City- Bay County jail will help train two future bomb-sniffing dogs. The two Labradors, named Pancho and Peyton, are still puppies so they require a lot of attention. Dakota Catt, one of three inmates chosen to participate in the program, said, “It’s a 24/7 job. They live beside our bunks. We live with them every single day. They’re in here with us.” Prison officials said the three individuals were chosen due to their limited criminal record and the fact that they did not have a violent history. “They’re inmates that are really considered trustees and somebody who can be trusted to handle a dog that is very valuable,” said Warden Rick Anglin. Every day the inmates train the Labrador puppies in an outdoor play area. “They could be working to look for drugs or explosives,” said Sharon Gavin the K-9 Program Director. The program is funded by Auburn University which will eventually take custody of the pups after a year for more specialized training in bomb and drug detection. Joseph Leberte, another of the three chosen to help raise the dogs, said he was grateful for the opportunity. “I really appreciate the chance that they’ve given me to do this so it’s just really rewarding and I appreciate it,” said inmate Joseph Leberte. Prison officials hope the program will continue and they will have the chance to raise more dogs.
Saturday, June 16, 2012
A FEW PRISON DOG PICTURES
THE FIRST PRISON DOG PROGRAM IN 1981
WASHINGTON STATE CORRECTIONAL CENTER FOR WOMEN
THE FIRST PRISON DOG PROGRAM IN 1981
WASHINGTON STATE CORRECTIONAL CENTER FOR WOMEN
HELPING PAWS PRISON PROGRAM ~ ILLINOIS
JANET ON RIGHT CEO OF NEW HORIZONS SERVICE DOGS AT SAGO PALMS CORRECTIONAL IN FLORIDA
HELPING PAWS PROGRAM ~ ILLINOIS
PRISON ADMINISTRATION ARGENTINA WITH SR PAULINE AND HER SERVICE DOG RENI AND DR ROMERO ON LEFT
RENI AND NICKY VISTING THE YOUTH CORRECTIONAL CENTER IN CALIFORNIA
REBIBBIA PRISON ~ ITALY
WASHINGTON STATE
YOUTH AUTHORITY IN CALIFORNIA ~ JANETTE THOMAS TRAINER AND DIRECTOR OF THE CALIFORNIA PATHWAYS PROGRAM.. ON LEFT STANDING AND SISTER PAULINE ON RIGHT
HELPING PAWS PROGRAM ~ ILLINOIS
MIAMI FL
DEATH ROW ~ ANGOLA PRISON LOUSIANA
ITALY ~ PRISON HORSE PROGRAM
ALASKA
ARGENTINA
ARGENTINA
POLAND
WASHINGTON STATE
HELPING PAWS PROGRAM ~ ILLINOIS
GREEN BAY, CORRECTIONAL
RENI ~ PRISON SERVICE DOG
NEW HORIZONS PRISON DOG PROGRAM ~ FLORIDA
DOG FOOD PROVIDED BY FROMMS DOG FOOD IN WISCONSIN
PATTY TEACHING THE INMATES IN FLORIDA
JANET, CEO OF NEW HORIZONS AT THE PRISON DOG PROGRAM IN FLORIDA
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTION FOR WOMEN.. A CST PROGRAM
CALIFORNIA YOUTH AUTHORITY JANETTE THOMAS TRAINER AND A PATHWAYS DIRECTOR OF THE PROGRAM
REBIBBIA PRISON IN ROME, ITALY
JANET THOMAS DIRECTOR OF THE PATHWAYS TO HOPE CALIFONIA YOUTH AND PROGRAM TALKING WITH SHORTY, OF ANIMAL PLANETS PROGRAM PIT BOSS.
PRISON DOG GETTING HER NAILS DONE
PATHWAYS TO HOPE PAWS YOUTH CALIFORNIA PROGRAM. SHORTY FROM THE ANIMAL PLANET PROGRAM "PIT BOSS" CAME TO VISIT
SERVICE DOG TRAINED IN PRISON TO HELP A WOUNDED VET
SERVICE DOG TRAINED IN PRISON TO HELP A WOUNDED VET
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)