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CBS News
26 minutes ago
- CBS News
"Special" K-9 and handler were among the Colorado first responders who helped out in Texas after flooding
At first glance, Pickles looks like any other working dog -- eager to get to work and ready to move. But a closer look reveals something different. "He's a bit of a special dog," said Michael Zukowski, Pickles' handler and longtime member of Colorado Task Force One. "He's got kind of a malformed face." Pickles, a 3-year-old black Labrador, was born with a cleft palate and some facial paralysis. Still, none of that affects what he was born to do: work. "With his nose, I jokingly say it's a cheat code sometimes because when he gets an odor and he starts taking those big deep breaths, he actually snorts," said Zukowski. "I can hear it from quite a distance so I can tell when he gets an odor." Pickles is a human remains detection dog, one of just three certified by FEMA in Colorado and one of only 90 in the U.S. His keen nose and unrelenting drive make him a critical part of the task force. "I jokingly say it's a cheat code sometimes," Zukowski said. "When he gets an odor and starts taking those big deep breaths, he actually snorts, and I can hear it from quite a distance. So, I can tell when he's got something." Pickles and Zukowski recently returned from a two-week deployment in Texas following deadly flooding in Kerr County. Along ravaged riverbanks and through large debris fields, the pair searched for the missing – including at Camp Mystic, where several young girls and counselors lost their lives. "There were several days when I had to dial it back and put him in a kennel in an air-conditioned vehicle for about two hours to cool his body temperature down," Zukowski said. "And he still wanted to work." Zukowski, who's responded to disasters around the world during his 15-year career with Colorado Task Force One, said the flooding in Texas was some of the worst he's ever seen. "It's probably one of the more destructive ones I've seen for water damage," he said. "Second to the typhoon in the Philippines." Now back home, Pickles is getting some well-deserved rest and playtime with Zukowski. It's a chance to just be a dog, even if he doesn't quite look like the rest. "You're a happy dog," Zukowski said to Pickles. Still, that downtime won't last long. Pickles has at least 30 hours of training scheduled each month to stay sharp for the next mission – whenever and wherever that call may come.


CBS News
26 minutes ago
- CBS News
Teens in Chicago Housing Authority housing get special gifts before heading to college
A group of 200 teens bound for 70 colleges across the country got a special send-off from the Chicago Housing Authority Tuesday. The CHA wanted to make sure the teens, who all live in CHA housing, have the essential tools to start their future. Rayne Holmes is headed to Morehouse College, an Atlanta-based Historically Black College and University, on Aug. 11. It's his dream school and has been since he was a sophomore. "I found the value of it. The value of being around a group of leaders and Black men who just poured into each other,"he said. Rayne is Winter Morris' only child. She's over the moon about everything he's accomplished, but knows the roadtrip to Atlanta will be an emotional one. "I know I'm going to cry the whole 12 hours back. So my sister is going to drive. I know I'm going to be very emotional because that's all I got," she said. But before they leave, they attended the CHA's 15th annual "Take Flight College Send-Off" held at Malcolm X College. "We know education is research proven pathway out of poverty and we as a housing agency want to do what we can to support our young residents," said Kristen Hamer, CHA director of corporate and external partnerships. Students walked away with essentials for their freshman year like laptops as well as supplies like bath towels and pillows. "I'm from low income, so I don't want my son to be from low income, you know. I don't want him to be a product of the things that I went through in my life. So I always push him to do great and be better than me," Morris said. Holmes said he's grateful for the vent, but is concerned about how he'll thrive in college with a lack of financial resources. "I really want to get on campus and network a lot and try to just make those connections and build those relationships so I can find a different financial avenues," he said. But his mom is adamant he doesn't have to worry. "He's able to go and start, but it's just the second semester and all that, but he know his momma is going to make it happen. If I got to get three jobs, do Uber, Lyft, whatever; he knows I'm going to make it happen for him." Morris said.


News24
26 minutes ago
- News24
‘Police must investigate how he gets his money' — Jub Jub in R120k fraud storm
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