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Class act

27 Aug 2007 04:48 pm

There's something sort of touching about this:


A top police sniffer dog working for an elite Mexican drug squad was stolen during an airport transfer by thieves who left a mixed-breed puppy in its place, the attorney general's office said.

Rex IV, a highly trained Belgian Malinois sheepdog with a string of drug hauls behind him, was checked on to a flight from Mexico City this week with seven other police dogs bound for an operation in the northern state of Sinaloa.

But when the dogs arrived at Mazatlan airport, Sinaloa, their police handlers discovered a small black mongrel puppy inside Rex IV's cage, with the sniffer dog nowhere to be seen.

"In 17 years I've never seen anything like this. It's rather delicate," a Public Security Ministry spokesman told Reuters on Sunday, adding that the worry was the dog could help smugglers find new ways to conceal drugs.

"It's like kidnapping an intelligence agent," he said.

You know, it's the little touches that count. Many thieves would just have stolen the dog. Or left a Belgian Malinois in its place in order to forestall detection as long as possible. But this bunch left a mutt puppy in order to stave off the discovery just long enough to make their getaway. I feel like I've just witnessed a virtuoso piano performance, or a perfect game.

Comments (14)

The insult in leaving a mutt puppy makes it a classic.

The only way it could have been better is if they'd left a cat, or a stuffed Snoopy doll. Of a severed horsehead, a la Mario Puzo.

i was wetting myself! Here more quotes:

An airline employee told investigators a man posing as a police officer appeared at the counter and asked to switch the puppy for Rex IV because the Malinois was unwell.

genius. using the authority trick to steal from an elite drug squat is...

but actually - the smugglers could have trained the mutt to perform the same feat - maybe even better as inbreeding of "purebreds" does not improve sent in the long run (nor intelligence)...

G.O.B.: It’s a classic bait and switch. This is a decoy cooler. We take it in, switch it with the one from the photo and get out of there. Kitty comes back, everything’s normal. It’s like we were never there.

Michael: But Dad’s gone.

G.O.B.: Long gone. But it buys us all the time in the world. I got it back, Mikey, the self-confidence. I am a magician.

Michael: No, I’m saying, when Kitty comes back and notices that Dad’s gone, the first thing she’s going to do is check the cooler to see if the evidence is there. It buys us, like, one second.

So.... this is what? Envy? You admire them. Sort of speaks volumes doesn't it?

Now I know I am a cynic, BUT...
==
"An airline employee told investigators a man posing as a police officer appeared at the counter and asked to switch the puppy for Rex IV because the Malinois was unwell."
==

So a guy in uniform walks up with a mutt pup in his hands and says, "I want to switch 'em out. Go ahead and keep the cage, just swap the dogs."

I hope the "airline employee" isn't their sole source of information...

".. It's rather delicate," a Public Security Ministry spokesman, not to be confused with Michael Vick or Mitt Romney, told Reuters. Poor dog.

I see an idea for a bad movie script:

Incompetent hoodlums lose drug shipment in drug-induced stupor. Hit on brilliant idea for finding them. Steal drug sniffing dog to find lost shipment. Everywhere they go, everyone they meet, dog sniffs and barks. If only Cheech and Ching were younger.

Excuse me, I seem to have stumbled into an AOL chat room. I thought this was a blog associated with the "Atlantic."

Meanwhile, in a small apartment a world away, the ailing Arthur Silber is writing one brilliant blog post after another, engaging the most profound issues of American decadence.

It appears that established print media are playing a cruel joke on the blogosphere by hiring random twits and twerps to "compete" with the best and brightest independent bloggers.

There is a difference.

Considering the rampant corruption in the Mexican police, I wouldn't be surprised if the guy who pulled the switch was an actual police officer. After all, how else would he know about the dogs? There's some kind of inside connection.

By the way Megan, I really hope The Atlantic is paying you well to take all this abuse from their readers. I'm pretty used to reading abusive comments in the blogosphere, but this stuff is particularly bad. Or maybe I'm just especially protective because I'm a long-time reader of yours.

Surely it has not escaped the notice of the Atlantic editors that the angry responses to Megan's vapid musings are yet another demonstration of the authority inversion phenomenon characteristic of the blogosphere.

In the past, the print columnist would dispense authoritative conventional wisdom, and a tiny trickle of responses would appear in a heavily edited letters column. The author and editors would always have the last word. In the blogosphere, a feeble or faulty post by the blog "author" is typically answered by a torrent of critical posts that often provide superior insight, information, and literary skill.

A case in point is Megan's goofy post on US Health Care. The reader is far better served by the response thread than by Megan's feeble original post. In short, the readers of this and most other blogs are generating more content value than the blog "author. "

When Megan's editors tire of watching her pinata act, I hope they will replace her with someone who is not routinely embarrassed by random posters in her own blog threads. There are plenty of worthy independent bloggers who need the financial support and exposure that the Atlantic masthead can provide.

So.... this is what? Envy? You admire them. Sort of speaks volumes doesn't it?


Congratulations Noen. You have just won the self-righteous jackass comment of the day award.

I can't figure out who the bigger tool is;

Megan, for writing this dreck, or the brain dead veggie stalks who defend her.

Megan:
Pay no attention to the leftards and moonbats who infest this place. We think you'd make a fine addition to the Pajamas Media Network, perhaps you could team up with Manalo, the shoe blogger?

Get in touch.

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