From News Nation:
“Retired Ohio sheriff, his
tiny K-9 partner die hours apart”
The Ohio county sheriff and his
tiny police dog were inseparable, their lives unwaveringly intertwined. It thus
seems fitting that retired Geauga County Sheriff Dan McClelland, 67, and his
crime-fighting partner Midge, 16, would both die on Wednesday — McClelland, at
a hospital after a lengthy battle with cancer and Midge, a few hours later at
home, perhaps of a broken heart.
McClelland retired at the end of
2016 after 13 years as sheriff in this semi-rural county east of Cleveland. He
spent 44 years total with the Geauga County Sheriff’s Office and a decade
alongside Midge, a drug-sniffing Chihuahua-rat terrier mix certified by
Guinness World Records in 2006 as the smallest police dog on the globe. He and
Midge, but especially Midge, were rock stars in Geauga County. Wherever
McClelland went, Midge was by his side. At the office, she would nap on a dog
bed beside his desk. Schoolchildren were enthralled during their visits. McClelland’s
successor, Sheriff Scott Hildenbrand, recalls driving a golf cart with
McClelland and Midge in the passenger seat at the Great Geauga County Fair. He
said it was a slow ride as people flocked to them, petting and fussing over
Midge. “He used to joke that people would see him in a parade in a car and
would say, ‘Hey, there’s Midge and whatshisname,'” Hildenbrand said. “I think
she was more popular than him.” Retired Lt. John Hiscox, a longtime
spokesperson for the sheriff’s office, put it this way: “It was like bringing
Elvis Presley to the midway.” Despite her size, Midge was no slouch when it
came to her job. It was McClelland who decided that Midge, the runt of her
litter, would make an ideal drug-sniffing dog. Unlike large and more aggressive
police dogs, the mild-mannered Midge would search vehicles without tearing up
upholstery or leaving muddy footprints. Searching underneath vehicles was never
a problem.
Their partnership led to
appearances on daytime television talk shows and mentions in national
magazines, including Playboy. She maintained her K-9 certifications until their
joint retirement. Hildenbrand said he was surprised when McClelland decided to
retire and begin traveling the country in a recreational vehicle with his wife,
Beverly, and, of course, Midge. “He spent 44 years protecting people in this
county and, quite frankly, he loved his job, every minute of it,” Hildenbrand
said. “I thought he’d never retire. McClelland was a good leader who always had
the best interest of the county and community in mind, Hiscox said. “He was
fair and was not afraid to make a decision,” Hiscox said. “He was always
willing to listen, but when he made a decision it was final.” The family said
McClelland and Midge will be buried together.
^ This is a sad yet heart-warming
story. ^
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