ASU K-9 Disney retires after 8 years of licking crime


a dog licking a man on the face

K-9 officer Disney has helped Arizona State University's Police Department take a bite out of crime for the past eight years, and now it's time for her to hang up her collar. In an event fit for a dog, Disney was honored for her service as an explosives-detection canine at an official retirement ceremony Aug. 23. 

Members of the ASU and local community — many whose Disney's service has touched personally — came out to say farewell and thank the beloved dog who, as ASU Police Chief Michael Thompson said, was "an ambassador for police to the citzens that we serve."

 

Video by Ken Fagan/ASU Now

Disney helped pave the way for the ASU Police Department's current K-9 program, and throughout her career she was deployed more than 300 times for special events, public demonstrations and crime scenes. She will retire with her human partner, Officer Parker Dunwoody, and his family. 

"She's taken me on some good adventures," Dunwoody said during the ceremony. "She's the star; I just held the leash." 

Top photo: Disney gives her handler, Officer Parker Dunwoody, a kiss at her retirement ceremony in the ASU Police Department Building. Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now

More University news

 

people jog on a park trail

ASU community exceeds goal, raises $835K for Valley of the Sun United Way

The Arizona State University community stepped up and raised over $835,266 for the Valley of the Sun United Way — exceeding the $800,000 goal for 2024.Of the total, $802,192.17 was raised through…

Arizona State University PhD student Andrea Brenner aboard the RV Atlantic Explorer (RVAE) at the Bermuda Institute of Ocean Sciences

ASU launches online ocean futures undergraduate degrees

Our oceans make up three quarters of the planet’s surface and contain most of its biodiversity. Due to rapid and global changes, they are endangered — making more urgent a deeper knowledge of ocean…

Watts College, sign, Downtown Phoenix campus, Arizona State University

ASU public affairs graduate programs rise to No. 11 in nation in US News & World Report’s 2025 rankings

Arizona State University rose to No. 11 nationwide for best graduate public affairs programs in U.S. News & World Report’s 2025 rankings, the magazine announced.The ranking, released April 8,…