Haso was found dead at around 4.30pm on Friday and Cattaraugus County Sheriff’s office suspects the dog may have been deliberately injured. An active criminal investigation is underway. The dog’s body was found about half a mile from its owner’s home in West Valley, said Captain Jordan Haynes, the chief of detectives who fell on the dog after he followed up on a tip. It was clear to lawmakers that Haso did not die of dehydration or exposure, he said. “The way he died is such that a criminal investigation would be launched,” he said. Haynes said he could not give further details as investigators continue to interview people. He said he expects to have more information to be made public on Saturday. After receiving information from the Sheriff’s Office, the entire penitentiary began searching for the dog, Haynes said.

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Haso’s body was taken to Cornell University for an autopsy. Neighbors, friends, and even professionals, sleuths who found dogs had volunteered to search for the missing K-9 since Monday night. Hasso’s owner, Deputy Richard Ludberg, was upset after Hasso ran away on Monday night and did not return home until Tuesday morning. Lundberg lives in Cattaraugus County, next to hundreds of acres of forest. This made the search difficult. ATVs and cameras were used to locate Haso. The Buffalo News wrote about Haso in January 2020, when the dog was among the K-9s who withdrew when marijuana was legalized in New York State, endangering their illegal drug training. Both Lundberg and Haso left the K-9 at the same time.

Apollo is still jumping, barking and wagging his tail when Eri County Deputy Sheriff Robert Galbraith wears police gear every morning. For three years the 6-year-old German Shepherd worked alongside Galbraith as a drug detection dog and tracker. But Apollo is no longer leaving for work with Galbraith. Last spring, the Sheriff unabashedly withdrew Apollo, though Haso played a key role in the arrest of a city mechanical parking meter and a deputy teacher. After lawmakers stopped the vehicle of a city official on the Scajaquada Expressway, the K-9 discovered a cocaine bag hidden in a side air duct on the dashboard. The sheriff seized half a kilo of cocaine, 15 grams of fentanyl and $ 7,500 in cash from the couple’s car. Ludberg also narrated Haso’s gifts as a tracker. The K-9 smelled of the pajamas of an old man Clarence with dementia who had gone away one night. Haso spotted the perfume in the forest and found it. “There are at least eight people who would not be alive today if it were not for him,” Ludberg said Wednesday. Ludberg said he let Hasso get out of his kennel around 7:45 p.m. Monday and went to his garage for four minutes. When the MP returned, Haso was gone. The MP used his security cameras and suspected that something caught the dog’s attention, causing him to take off. Ludberg and their ATV friends wandered in the woods, with Lundberg leaving pieces of clothing and bedding with his perfume on to give Hassos a trace of fragrance in the house. Eri County Sheriff’s Office released information about the missing K-9 on social media on Wednesday. A dog search team called “Sherlock Bones” helped with the search. Ludberg said on Thursday that they had found what they thought were Hasso’s traces. Ludberg hoped that Hasso, a professional tracker, had simply lost his way home or was alive but injured or stuck somewhere. But he said Wednesday that his biggest fear was that Hasso, a dog in perfect health on Monday, was no longer alive. “This is the most difficult thing,” he said. The smart way to start your day. We sift through all the news to give you a brief, informative look at the top titles and stories you need to read every day.