Sniffer dogs go solo


18 September 2007
Daily Star


The Brit sniffer dogs that unearthed vital evidence in the Maddie case have quit the police to become global crimebusters.

Springer spaniels Keela and Eddie blew the probe wide open when they apparently smelled death in the McCanns' holiday apartment and hire car.

That was after Portuguese dogs had helped in the investigation, but had sniffed out little. Tests showed bodily fluids they found in the spare tyre well in the Renault Scenic were allegedly an 88% match of Madeleine's DNA.
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International investigator, K-9 dog join Parker search


14 September 2007
 Chattanooga Times/Free Press
Chloe Morrison


The investigation into the disappearance of Walker County 911 dispatcher Theresa Parker is a "high-priority" case, FBI agents said Thursday, and authorities unveiled tools to be used in the search.

Martin Grime, a 30-year veteran of military and civil police work in the United Kingdom and developer of a K-9 forensic program, has been asked to help in the investigation, along with his dog, Eddie. They are assisting the FBI, Georgia Bureau of Investigation and Walker County Sheriff's Department in narrowing leads.

"Hopefully we will find Theresa Parker," Mr. Grime said. "Hopefully we will find evidence. Hopefully all the information we claim will give us a line of inquiry and it just saves conducting 50 lines of inquiry."

Mrs. Parker has been missing since March 21. Her estranged husband, former LaFayette, Ga., police Officer Sam Parker, has been called a "person of interest" by the FBI.

Walker County Sheriff Steve Wilson said Thursday that Mr. Parker is the only person of interest in the case.
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Specialized K-9 to Aid in Georgia Search


Eddie
Specialized K-9 to Aid in Ga. Search
Sep 14, 2007
KTHV
Monika Rued
http://www.todaysthv.com/news/story.aspx?storyid=52985

The FBI, the GBI and Walker County, Georgia, Sheriff's investigators have some new and potentially powerful help in solving the seemingly unsolvable disappearance of Theresa Parker, the Walker County 911 dispatcher. A world-renowned police dog and his handler from England just arrived in Georgia.

The FBI considers them -- Martin Grime and his 7-year-old, English Springer Spaniel, Eddie -- two of the best in the law enforcement specialty of canine forensics, able to find evidence everyone else missed.

"Yes, hopefully we will find Theresa Parker. Yes, we will hopefully find evidence,"
Grime said at an afternoon news conference with Sheriff Steve Wilson in the Walker County Seat of Lafayette on Thursday afternoon.

Eddie's skill and training enable him to find microscopic evidence that others cannot, even when the evidence is hidden, or even when someone has tried to wash it away.

"A small amount of forensic evidence," for example, "may be under a board in a house, or under a large boulder, and things like that, where forensic evidence can't normally be recovered from. We'll use the dogs to try and locate it for us,"
Grime said.

Grime and Eddie are in high demand, world wide. Getting them to Walker County from England to help solve Theresa Parker's disappearance is an indication of how high a priority her case is for the FBI, according to one FBI agent close to the case.

Eddie is a veteran of more than 200 homicide cases, working with Grime, who has 30 years' of law enforcement and military experience in conducting criminal investigations.

No one is officially calling Theresa Parker's case a homicide. Parker disappeared nearly six months ago, on March 21. Investigators in Walker County consider Parker's estranged husband, Sam Parker, to be a person of interest in her disappearance. So that's one line of inquiry they will pursue using Eddie's unique technique.

"It focuses on a particular line of inquiry so that we can either say, yes, we found Theresa and we found the guy who's done it or the lady that's done it, or, no,"
Grime said.

Earlier this year, in Portugal, for example, Martin Grime and Eddie were working the case of the missing 4-year-old English girl, Madeleine McCann.

And it was Eddie that detected what may have been Madeleine's blood in her parents' rental car. That's one of the reasons investigators now consider Madeleine's parents to be suspects.

Grimes said Eddie is "no miracle machine," but the FBI, GBI and Walker County investigators are clearly hoping the team from England can help crack their case, a case that has confounded everyone.

This past Sunday, Theresa Parker's family and friends marked her 42nd birthday with prayers, saying they are still confident that investigators are doing all they can.

"We still have not given up hope," Sheriff Wilson said Thursday, "and we're still optimistic that she will be found, or that we can find the reason why she disappeared."

Sheriff Wilson is not saying how long Martin Grime and Eddie will be in Walker County, but Grime had already been consulting with investigators, long distance, from his home in the UK, before he arrived in Walker County, and will continue to do so after he returns home.
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National, international investigators join Parker search


13 September 2007
Chattanooga Times/Free Press 

LAFAYETTE, Ga
Chloe Morrison


Authorities announced that investigator Martin Grime from the United Kingdom and his dog, Eddie, will help begin a new phase in the case of missing Walker County 911 dispatcher Theresa Parker.

The FBI brought in Mr. Grime and his English springer spaniel to help the investigation process by narrowing leads, FBI Agent John Parrish said.

Eddie is trained to detect human remains, Mr. Grime said.

FBI officials characterized the Parker case as a "high priority," and said that dogs like Eddie are used in "violent crime matters." .
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Dog trained to sniff blood brought in to missing dispatcher case


13 September 2007
Associated Press Newswires
Lafayette, Ga.


The Federal Bureau of Investigation has brought in a specially trained dog from the United Kingdom to help in the search for a missing 911 dispatcher.

The dog, an English Springer Spaniel named Eddie, and his handler, Martin Grime, will be in Lafayette for several days to help search for Theresa Parker, who has been missing since March 21, Walker County Sheriff Steve Wilson said on Thursday.

Grime, a 30-year veteran of police and military K-9 forensic investigations, said Eddie can pick up evidence that cannot be found any other way, even by other K-9 units.
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