Skip to main content
idfg-badge

Idaho Fish and Game

peppers_k9_working_vest_march_2022

Fish and Game’s first K-9 officer Pepper retires

idfg-tthompson

K-9 officers are an important enforcement tool for Fish and Game

After 11 years of service to the Idaho Fish and Game Department across the state, Pepper, the agency’s first K-9 officer has officially retired from service. Pepper, a black lab who worked alongside handler Senior Conservation Officer Jim Stirling of Twin Falls retired on March 15, 2022.

jim_and_pepper_snake_river_canyon_march_2022
Creative Commons Licence
Terry Thompson/Idaho Fish and Game

Senior Conservation Officer Jim Stirling with his K-9 partner Pepper. 

Pepper was trained to provide specific skills to the enforcement efforts of the Department, which included tracking people, evidence searches for items with a human scent, firearms or gun powder, as well as wildlife detection. 

stirling_and_pepper_looking_for_shells
Creative Commons Licence
Idaho Fish and Game

Conservation Officer Jim Stirling and K-9 Officer Pepper look for evidence of shotgun shells.

The Department’s K-9 program was initiated by Stirling who saw the need and value of what a K-9 could bring to Idaho Fish and Game. Not only was Pepper used for enforcement purposes, he also was key in providing education and outreach opportunities to the public over the time of his career.

k9_pepper_helps_in_the_cap_trailer
Creative Commons Licence
Idaho Fish and Game

K-9 Officer Pepper helps out with the Citizens Against Poaching trailer at an event in Twin Falls.

“Working with Pepper has been an amazing experience to me both personally and professionally” stated conservation officer Stirling, “I’m very proud of the work that Pepper accomplished from tracking small children who were lost, to finding evidence that was critical to identifying offenders.”

k9_pepper_at_the_ready_march_2022
Creative Commons Licence
Terry Thompson/Idaho Fish and Game

K-9 Officer Pepper waiting for direction from his handler.

With Pepper’s retirement as the first K-9, the Department currently has three other K-9 officers stationed around the state.
According to Stirling, he is already working to begin the training with a new K-9 partner that will follow in the same paw-prints that Pepper has established for all K-9 officers to follow.