Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://212.1.86.13:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/6878
Title: New illicit drugs / narcotics customs sniffing dog detection technique (pooling technique) for stacked sea containers
Other Titles: Новий метод виявлення незаконних наркотиків/наркотичних речовин у морських контейнерах за допомогою службових собак (метод об'єднання)
Authors: Weerth, C.
Keywords: Container
Customs controls
Illicit Drugs
Narcotics
Smuggling
Detection Dogs
Drug detection
Dog Training
Sniffing Dog
World Customs Organization
Issue Date: 14-Oct-2024
Publisher: Університет митної справи та фінансів
Citation: Weerth C. New illicit drugs / narcotics customs sniffing dog detection technique (pooling technique) for stacked sea containers. Customs Scientific Journal. 2023. №2. С. 57-16.
Abstract: The use of customs dogs has been a successful tactical tool for detecting smuggled and hidden illicit drugs and narcotics worldwide for more than 65 years. The World Customs Organization (WCO) has created a network of 18 Regional Dog Training Centers for the training of Customs dogs in different detection techniques. Organized crime is increasingly using the regular transport of goods in containers as a means of transport for their drug shipments. In Europe, the main ports of entry are the seaports in Belgium and the Netherlands and also the German seaports of Hamburg and Bremerhaven. The control of containers is difficult because they have to be individually filtered out of the stacked containers and effectively controlled, which is time-consuming and costly. A new customs dog technique was developed at the main customs office (Hauptzollamt) Bremen, with which the air can be sucked out of several containers and collected and fed to the sniffer dogs for sampling. This new technique makes it possible to inspect more containers and to carry out this inspection faster and more cost-effectively. This technique should lead to more targeted and better results when detecting drugs in containers. It was developed by the Bremerhaven customs dog handler Horst-Dieter Träger (PoolingMethod oder Träger-Method) and it is now also being trained and distributed in the customs dog schools of the General Customs Directorate. In the future, this should not only be limited to Germany but should lead to an improvement in the detection rate of drugs in containers worldwide within the framework of the World Customs Organization.
URI: http://biblio.umsf.dp.ua/jspui/handle/123456789/6878
ISSN: 2518-1599
Appears in Collections:Customs 2023/2

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