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Police officer Ahn Seong-heon with Larry. Photo: AFP

South Korea to honour Larry, its fallen police dog who helped solve a murder

Highly trained in tracking evidence through scent, the German shepherd helped officers with 39 felony cases and took part in searches for more than 170 missing people

South Korea

A long-serving South Korean police dog killed in the line of duty by a snake will be honoured with a rare ceremony next month in a country where a million of his fellow canines are estimated to be eaten every year.

Larry, a seven-year-old German shepherd, was searching for a missing person on a mountain in North Chungcheong province when the reptile bit him on his left hind leg in July.

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He is the first police dog to die “in the line of duty” anywhere in the country, the Daegu Metropolitan Police Agency said.

Highly trained in tracking evidence through scent, Larry helped officers with 39 felony cases and took part in searches for more than 170 missing people since first being deployed in 2012.

Larry helped solved a murder last year. Photo: AFP

He provided a key clue to an unsolved murder last year after detecting the body of a woman buried 70cm (2.3 feet) underground near a hiking trail.

An officer said the carcass was cremated and a funeral service was held after Larry’s death last month.

“Roam freely in heaven,” read a caption on a photograph of Larry in front of flowers, pictures showed.

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Police have commissioned a bronze plaque “in honour of Larry” listing his achievements, which will be hung in the regional police headquarters at a ceremony in September, the officer added.

It is a marked contrast to the fate of many dogs in South Korea, where their boiled meat has long been a part of the cuisine and remains a delicacy for some, with about one million dogs believed to be eaten annually.

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