Congrats to Hooch! French Mastiff with No Tongue Wins 2016 American Hero Dog Title

Hooch, a French Mastiff with badly cropped ears, a broken tail — and no tongue to make him a better bait dog in dog-fighting rings — was announced as the American Hero Dog of 2016 at last night’s sixth annual American Humane Association (AHA) Hero Dog Awards ceremony.

The awards, presented by the Lois Pope LIFE Foundation, “celebrate the important role dogs play in our lives,” said Dr. Robin Ganzert, AHA president and CEO. “The American public and our special judging panel now have an extraordinarily tough task ahead of them in determining who our top dog will be because all are worthy winners.”

That’s for sure. Over the past five years, millions of votes have been cast online for nearly a thousand dogs competing for the award. The program reaches more than 1 billion people each year.

Hooch was the finalist in the Emerging Heroes category, which honors ordinary dogs who do extraordinary things. When the starving, skittish dog who’d been taken in by a shelter refused to eat, instead thrashing his food and water bowls around “like a maniac,” according to the AHA, a veterinarian discovered his tongue had been cut off at the base.

Zach Skow, of Marley’s Mutts Dog Rescue in Tehachapi, Calif., adopted Hooch. He nursed him back to health by hand-feeding him, which he still continues to do.

Patient and gentle, Hooch is now a therapy dog with Marley’s Mutts’ Miracle Mutts, helping autistic, abused and special-needs kids. He’s living proof that it’s possible to overcome any adversity.

“Well, Mutt Militia, WE DID IT! You did it!!!!” says a status update today on the Marley’s Mutts Dog Rescue Facebook page. “Your commitment to our mission and the big orange bear led to a huge victory last night! Hooch won not only his category but the overall Hero Dog Award!”

Last night’s ceremony was dedicated to Harley, the winner of the 2015 Hero Dog Award. Harley, a 15-year-old Chihuahua who spent the first 10 years of his life in a puppy-mill cage before becoming a “spokesdog” against these cruel facilities, died in March.

Save the date: The AHA Hero Dog Awards is scheduled to air on the Hallmark Channel on Oct. 28 at 8:00 p.m./7:00 p.m. CT.

Hooch and his dog dad, Zach Skow.
Photo by Chris Weeks/Getty Images for American Humane Association

Meet the 2016 Hero Dog Awards Finalists

These were the finalists in the other Hero Dog Awards categories. To help hero dogs everywhere, AHA will donate $2,500 to each finalist’s charity partner, and an additional $5,000 to Hooch’s charity partner, Pets for Patriots.

Arson Dogs: Judge

As an arson K-9 with the Allentown Fire Department in Pennsylvania, 7-year-old Judge, a Labrador Retriever, has worked 275 fire scenes over the past five years. The evidence Judge discovered has led to many arrests and civil penalties for insurance fraud cases, and the number of arson fires in the city has dropped nearly 53 percent. Judge is currently participating in a pilot program to provide autistic children with lifesaving information.

Guide/Hearing Dogs: Hook

Ten-year-old, 12-pound Hook is a hearing dog for his handler. As the two walked across train tracks in Sacramento, Calif., the woman couldn’t hear an oncoming train. Hook began jumping on her, alerting her to the train and saving her life. He is always by the side of his handler, who’s a family therapist. Whenever her patients are upset, Hook will jump into their laps to comfort them. Hook also chased off an intruder who broke into the office.

Law Enforcement Dogs: Roo

K9 Roo is a ballistics/bomb dog with the Boston Police Department. After the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing, Roo searched for secondary devices and was the only police dog there for the capture of Dzokhar Tsarnaev. During his career — Roo is retiring this year — he recovered 12 firearms (three had been used in homicides) and more than 300 shell casings involved in shootings. Roo answered at least 200 calls to investigate suspicious packages. When he’s not working, Roo visits children in hospitals and performs demonstrations at community events.

Military Dogs: Layka

In 2012, as Layka’s team fired on an enemy compound in Afghanistan, rifle fire was returned from the compound. Layka was sent inside to look for combatants and explosives. She was hit with four rounds from an AK-47 in her right shoulder. Layka was rushed to a location where medics worked on her, and then flown to a base where her right front leg was amputated. After additional surgeries, Layka was medically retired from service three months later.

Search-and-Rescue Dogs: Kobuk

Kobuk, a trained and certified member of the non-profit Maine Search and Rescue Dogs team, found a 77-year-old woman suffering from diabetes and dementia who had been lost in the woods for over two days without food, water or her medications. Running almost a quarter mile into the woods, Kobuk spotted the woman and then ran back to alert his handler, and ran back with him into the woods to rescue the woman in time to save her life.

Service Dogs: Gander

Gander, saved from a Colorado shelter and trained by a women’s prison program, is now a service dog and was the first mixed breed to win the American Kennel Club’s Award for Canine Excellence (ACE). He and his handler travel the country to raise awareness of PTSD, veteran suicide, service dogs, and people with visible and invisible disabilities. They have helped raise a million dollars for veterans’ groups, veterans, service dog charities and people in need.

Therapy Dogs: Mango

As a stray, Mango was hit by a car, paralyzing her rear legs. She was going to be euthanized by a shelter when Emma’s Cleft Palate Chihuahua Rescue stepped in. Mango is now a therapy dog for her dog mom, a veteran. They participate in the Emma’s Rescue Reserve program, in which paralyzed dogs work with disabled veterans, showing them that if a small dog in a wheelchair can overcome her handicap, then so can they. Mango’s Freedom Wheels, named in her honor, has donated over 150 custom-built wheelchairs to help other animals become mobile.

Photos via Facebook

Vote Now for the 2016 AHA Hero Dog Award Winner

They all deserve it, right? You can vote now through Aug. 24 for your favorite pup to win the grand prize in the 2016 American Humane Association (AHA) Hero Dog Awards, presented by the Lois Pope LIFE Foundation.

The awards “celebrate the important role dogs play in our lives,” said Dr. Robin Ganzert, AHA president and CEO. “The American public and our special judging panel now have an extraordinarily tough task ahead of them in determining who our top dog will be because all are worthy winners.”

That’s for sure. Over the past five years, millions of votes have been cast for nearly a thousand dogs competing for the award. The program reaches more than 1 billion people each year.

You can vote online once every day for your favorite finalist until noon Pacific Time on Aug. 24, as long as you’re a U.S. citizen and at least 18 years old.

The Hero Dog Awards ceremony will be held in Los Angeles on Sept. 10. The 2016 grand prize winner will be announced during the ceremony, which will be dedicated to Harley, the winner of the 2015 Hero Dog Award. Harley, a 15-year-old Chihuahua who spent the first 10 years of his life in a puppy-mill cage before becoming a “spokesdog” against these cruel facilities, died in March.

To help hero dogs everywhere, AHA will donate $2,500 to each finalist’s charity partner, and an additional $5,000 to the grand prize winner’s charity partner.

Founded in 1877, AHA was the first national humane organization in the U.S. and is the only one dedicated to protecting both children and animals.

It’s still a bit early to mark your calendar, but the 2016 Hero Dog Awards will be televised on the Hallmark Channel in late October.

2016 AHA Hero Dog Awards Finalists

Arson Dogs: Judge

As an arson K-9 with the Allentown Fire Department in Pennsylvania, 7-year-old Judge, a Labrador Retriever, has worked 275 fire scenes over the past five years. The evidence Judge discovered has led to many arrests and civil penalties for insurance fraud cases, and the number of arson fires in the city has dropped nearly 53 percent. Judge is currently participating in a pilot program to provide autistic children with lifesaving information.

Click here to vote for Judge.

Emerging Hero Dogs: Hooch

This category honors ordinary dogs who do extraordinary things. Hooch, a French Mastiff, has badly cropped ears, a broken tail — and no tongue. It was probably removed so he could be a bait dog. Zach Skow, of Marley’s Mutts Dog Rescue in Tehachapi, Calif., adopted Hooch from a shelter where the skittish dog had refused to eat or drink. Skow nursed Hooch back to health by hand-feeding him. Hooch is now a therapy dog with Marley’s Mutts’ Miracle Mutts, helping autistic, abused and special-needs kids realize they can overcome any obstacle.

Click here to vote for Hooch.

Guide/Hearing Dogs: Hook

Ten-year-old, 12-pound Hook is a hearing dog for his handler. As the two walked across train tracks in Sacramento, Calif., the woman couldn’t hear an oncoming train. Hook began jumping on her, alerting her to the train and saving her life. He is always by the side of his handler, who’s a family therapist. Whenever her patients are upset, Hook will jump into their laps to comfort them. Hook also chased off an intruder who broke into the office.

Click here to vote for Hook.

Law Enforcement Dogs: Roo

K9 Roo is a ballistics/bomb dog with the Boston Police Department. After the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing, Roo searched for secondary devices and was the only police dog there for the capture of Dzokhar Tsarnaev. During his career — Roo is retiring this year — he recovered 12 firearms (three had been used in homicides) and more than 300 shell casings involved in shootings. Roo answered at least 200 calls to investigate suspicious packages. When he’s not working, Roo visits children in hospitals and performs demonstrations at community events.

Click here to vote for Roo.

Military Dogs: Layka

In 2012, as Layka’s team fired on an enemy compound in Afghanistan, rifle fire was returned from the compound. Layka was sent inside to look for combatants and explosives. She was hit with four rounds from an AK-47 in her right shoulder. Layka was rushed to a location where medics worked on her, and then flown to a base where her right front leg was amputated. After additional surgeries, Layka was medically retired from service three months later.

Click here to vote for Layka.

Search-and-Rescue Dogs: Kobuk

Kobuk, a trained and certified member of the non-profit Maine Search and Rescue Dogs team, found a 77-year-old woman suffering from diabetes and dementia who had been lost in the woods for over two days without food, water or her medications. Running almost a quarter mile into the woods, Kobuk spotted the woman and then ran back to alert his handler, and ran back with him into the woods to rescue the woman in time to save her life.

Click here to vote for Kobuk.

Service Dogs: Gander

Gander, saved from a Colorado shelter and trained by a women’s prison program, is now a service dog and was the first mixed breed to win the  American Kennel Club’s Award for Canine Excellence (ACE). He and his handler travel the country to raise awareness of  PTSD, veteran suicide, service dogs, and people with visible and invisible disabilities. They have helped raise a million dollars for veterans’ groups, veterans, service dog charities and people in need.

Click here to vote for Gander.

Therapy Dogs: Mango

As a stray, Mango was hit by a car, paralyzing her rear legs. She was going to be euthanized by a shelter when Emma’s Cleft Palate Chihuahua Rescue stepped in. Mango is now a therapy dog for her dog mom, a veteran. They participate in the Emma’s Rescue Reserve program, in which paralyzed dogs work with disabled veterans, showing them that if a small dog in a wheelchair can overcome her handicap, then so can they. Mango’s Freedom Wheels, named in her honor, has donated over 150 custom-built wheelchairs to help other animals become mobile.

Click here to vote for Mango.

Photo via Facebook

Military Hero Dog Will Be Parade’s First Fur-Legged Grand Marshal

When Sgt. Rambo leads the Live Oak Memorial Day Parade in Texas this Saturday, it will be the first time the parade has had a fur-legged grand marshal.

But it won’t be Rambo’s first time as a grand marshal — the 8-year-old (as of May 27) German Shepherd from Converse, Texas, had the same honors last year in the Universal City Veterans Day Parade.

Rambo, recipient of the Military Dogs honor in the American Humane Association’s 2015 Hero Dog Awards, served in the Marine Corps as an explosives detection dog. He participated in 622 missions on the base and in the local community of Cherry Point, N.C. Rambo was medically retired due to a shoulder injury, and later had to have his left front leg amputated.

But that didn’t stop this veteran. Rambo became a mascot for Alamo Honor Flight, a nonprofit organization that flies veterans from San Antonio to Washington, D.C., free of charge so they can visit their memorials.

Lisa Phillips, Rambo’s handler and dog mom, has had him for four years.  “He’s also my service dog, and he’s the love of my life,” she told MySanAntonio.com.

Phillips is also a veteran. While serving in 2005, she adopted another military working dog named Gizmo. When Gizmo retired, his health declined, and his veterinary bills began piling up.

“I had to get a second job to provide for him the medical care he deserved,” Phillips told MySanAntonio.com.

After Gizmo died of kidney failure, Phillips founded Gizmo’s Gift. The nonprofit provides financial support to families adopting retired military working dogs. Rambo is the organization’s mascot.

“We’re supporting about 30 dogs right now, and about 15 have been adopted by prior handlers,” Phillips told MySanAntonio.com.

Until recently, retired military working dogs were considered equipment. They were often left behind on enemy soil since the cost of transporting them to the United States was prohibitive.

But late last year President Obama signed the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), which includes a provision that not only guarantees that these dogs are returned by the military to the U.S. when they retire, but also that their handlers have first dibs on adopting them as pets.

“We thank these brave heroes for serving our country, and we are grateful that every one will finally get the retirement they deserve with those who care for them most,” Dr. Robin Ganzert, president and CEO of the American Humane Association, wrote at the time in a message to supporters.

Many of these four-legged heroes have now been adopted by their former handlers, Phillips said.

“The tricky thing is, most dogs have multiple handlers throughout their careers,” she told MySanAntonio.com. “Rambo got injured early on. Through networking on Facebook, [my adoption of Rambo] was a perfect fit.”

When Rambo, with Phillips by his side, leads the Live Oak Memorial Day Parade on Saturday, he’ll be wearing his Marines vest with his rank and patches.

“He knows something special is about to happen when he gets to put on his vest,” Phillips told MySanAntonio.com.

The Live Oak Memorial Day Parade begins at 10 a.m. May 28.

To celebrate Rambo’s 8th birthday, special T-shirts are on sale for a limited time to benefit Gizmo’s Gift. You can also make a donation to Gizmo’s Gift by clicking here.

Photo via Facebook

Nominate Your Own ‘Superdog’ for a Hero Dog Award

Did your working or non-working pooch do something extraordinarily good this past year? Nominations are now being accepted for the 2016 American Humane Association (AHA) Hero Dog Awards.

The purpose of these awards, sponsored by the Lois Pope LIFE Foundation, is to “celebrate the powerful, age-old bond between dogs and people – and give recognition to courageous acts of heroism performed by our four-legged best friends,” according to the official website.

“Every year, hundreds of dogs vie for the coveted title of ‘American Hero Dog’ at the American Humane Association Hero Dog Awards,” said Dr. Robin Ganzert, president and CEO of AHA. “Dogs do so many extraordinary things to improve and even save our lives, and this contest is our way of saluting our best friends.”

Through March 2, you can nominate your hero dog in one of the following eight categories:

  • Emerging Hero Dogs (ordinary dogs who do extraordinary things)
  • Law Enforcement Dogs
  • Arson Dogs
  • Service Dogs
  • Therapy Dogs
  • Military Dogs
  • Search-and-Rescue Dogs
  • Guide and Hearing Dogs

Beginning March 16, you can vote online for your favorite in each category. The winner of each category will receive $2,500 for their designated charity partner, a nonprofit dedicated to celebrating the role of working dogs.

The category winners will be flown to Los Angeles to attend the 6th Annual Hero Dogs Award ceremony, to be held Sept. 10 at the Beverly Hilton. The ceremony will be televised on the Hallmark Channel in the fall.

During the awards ceremony, one of the category winners will receive the prestigious American Hero Dog of the Year honor, and an additional $5,000 for their charity partner.

The 2015 recipient was Emerging Hero Dogs category winner Harley, a 15-year-old Chihuahua who spent the first 10 years of his life living in a cage in a filthy puppy mill. Harley suffered several physical ailments, including the loss of an eye when his cage was power-washed while he was still inside it. He was the inspiration for the Harley to the Rescue campaign, which raises funds to rescue and provide medical care for more other puppy-mill dogs.

According to AHA, the Hero Dog Awards show is viewed by more than 1 billion people around the world each year. It has featured celebrity participants including Betty White, Martin Short and Fred Willard.

Founded in 1877, AHA was the first national humane organization in the U.S., and is the only one dedicated to protecting both children and animals.

Photo via Facebook

American Airlines Refuses American Hero Service Dog Award Winner

American Airlines employees at Los Angeles International Airport did something decidedly un-American earlier this week.

As Iraq and Afghanistan war veteran Capt. Jason Haag waited to board a flight home to Virginia Sept. 20 with his wife and his service dog, Axel — who been honored the night before at the American Humane Association 2015 American Hero Dog Awards as the Service Dog category winner — they were asked by American Airlines staff to step out of the line.

His family was not allowed to board the plane “due to us not being able to prove that Axel is a service dog,” the retired Marine wrote on the Jason and Axel Facebook page.

Haag, who had a traumatic brain injury and suffers from PTSD, met Axel through the nonprofit K9s for Warriors when the German Shepherd was a week away from being euthanized. Axel was sleeping on a shelter floor “and I was sleeping in my basement with a gun under my pillow,” Haag said on the Hero Dog Awards website. “Now I share a bed with a big and furry security blanket. And he’s a heck of a lot softer.”

The American Airlines gate agent who pulled him out of the line asked Haag if Axel was a real service dog.

“I just find that question kind of odd because nobody at the airport has asked me that, and I fly all the time,” Haag told ABC News. “I said, ‘Yes.'”

The agent then asked Haag about his disability, a “question that you’re not allowed to ask,” Haag said. The next question, also illegal, was whether Haag had paperwork for Axel, which he did not.

That’s right, the Service Dog of the Year and his family were denied access to the flight because Haag didn’t have documentation proving Axel was, in fact, a service dog.

“I didn’t provide ‘paperwork’ because 1) it’s illegal to ask for and against federal law; 2) I don’t carry it because I’ve never had issue; 3) I called ahead and everything was fine; 4) but I did provide an ID to try and appease them,” Haag wrote on Facebook.

The gate agent said his ID was fake, Haag told ABC News.

According to American Airlines’ service animal policy, an authorization form must be submitted 48 hours before the flight — not at the boarding gate. Haag submitted the form eight days prior to flying to Los Angeles.

“They had my wife in tears in front of 200 people as they brought more managers over to try and bully us,” he wrote on Facebook.

An American Airlines manager told him to come back to the airport with paperwork. Haag, his wife and Axel spent the night at a Los Angeles hotel and were finally able to fly home the next day.

“We have apologized to both Capt. Haag and his family for the confusion with Sunday’s travel plans,” American Airlines said in a statement Sept. 21. “American has a long and proud history of serving our military members, and hold the men and women who serve our country in the highest regard.”

That’s nice, but the incident shouldn’t have happened in the first place. And Haag doesn’t want it to happen again to anyone with a service animal.

“The best thing that can come out of this is we need to pass something to make a national registration and national certification process for service dogs,” he told ABC News.

Photo via Facebook

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