Crime and Science Radio with special guest Jeff Calandra

Published: Oct. 1, 2016, 3 p.m.

b'SHOW TITLE: Meet Iris, the FBI\\u2019s Only Electronic-sniffing Dog: An Interview with Jeffrey Calandra\\n\\nBLURB: Criminals and terrorists often hide data on electronic devices and then hide these devices. And they re often very clever about doing so. In such search situations, many subjects hide flash drives, hard drives, and other electronic components so if the police come, the instruments of their crimes may not be found. Take the example of a child ography case where a subject will put pictures of innocent children on a thumb drive and hide it in the yard, behind walls, and all sorts of other places. In a normal search, a human investigator may not find the media.\\n\\nWhat\\u2019s the FBI to do? Enter Iris, a young, eager, lab who is the FBI\\u2019s only canine capable of sniffing out these devices. And she\\u2019s one of only five in the world. How does she do it? How was she trained for such specialized work?\\xa0\\n\\nIn this episode we talk with Jeffrey Chandra and he can tell us how all this accomplished, as well as how dogs are used in other criminal detection activities.\\xa0\\n\\nBIO: Jeffrey Calandra possesses a Bachelor of Science in Computer Science and a Masters in Criminal Justice with concentration in Computer Forensics. He spent 6-1/2 years as a special agent working child ography, criminal computer intrusions, fraud, and bomb threat cases. HE has also assisted on Counter Intelligence, Counter-Terrorism, Drug, and Gang cases and has served as a member of the Hostage Negotiator team.\\xa0He is currently a K9 handler for the FBI Electronic Scent Detection K9 Iris.\\n\\nIris, a 20 month-old black lab, is the first of her type in the FBI and one of 5 in the world. She will be the future of law enforcement. Already we are getting requests from across the country for her assistance. For a little background, Iris was trained as a seeing eye dog for a year and then was selected to be a law enforcement dog.'