Military dog 07.12.23

Patrol Explosive Detection Dog - Enhanced Course instructor Staff Sgt. Tavian Brake is on-hand to provide support if needed, as Sgt. Veronica Mendez prepares to send her military working dog, Ket several feet away from her to search for simulated explosives during training on June 21 near the Army Military Working Dog Training Facility on Fort Leonard Wood. The 60-day PEDD-E course teaches handlers and their military working dogs to operate without a leash connecting them. (Photo by Melissa Buckley, Fort Leonard Wood Public Affairs Office)

The Patrol Explosive Detection Dog - Enhanced Course, or PEDD-E as it is commonly called, is designed to expand the capabilities of the military police patrol and explosive detection dogs by giving them the ability to operate without being physically tethered to their handler.

“You don’t always know what to expect when you are going into an operational environment. The off-leash capability gives that team — which in turn gives the whole unit — the ability to have a safer stand-off distance,” said Sgt. 1st Class Eric Jordan, PEDD-E instructor. “When a dog is searching for explosives, it is on a leash, with probably nothing longer than a 30-foot line. That means if that dog finds an explosive, the furthest that handler can be away is only 30 feet.”