Law enforcement learn to deal with skittish horses
Podcast Episode
About 20 emergency responders, police officers and firefighters gathered at The Farm in Milton Township this week for the free training sponsored by the Wisconsin State Horse Council Equine Foundation. They learned the basics of approaching, herding and haltering horses. Kyle Geissler reports. You can read more in today's Janesville Gazette.
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HotShot has seen just about anything you can throw at him.
He yawned as inexperienced law enforcement officers tried to harness him.
He eagerly turned his chestnut head toward the snap of a camera.
His owner, Edie Brogan, can lead him around by the tail or mane.
He’s the opposite of the type of horse you’d find loose on the highway from a broken fence or a trailer accident.
“Horses are prey animals, and they’re very reactive, and they can be very dangerous,” Brogan said.
Brogan taught law enforcement officers from around southern Wisconsin, including a few from Rock County, how to keep themselves and horses safe in loose animal situations Thursday.
About 20 emergency responders, police officers and firefighters gathered at The Farm in Milton Township for the free training sponsored by the Wisconsin State Horse Council Equine Foundation. They learned the basics of approaching, herding and haltering horses.
“The best thing to do with horses is to be as firm as necessary but as gentle as possible,” Brogan advised the group.
She would know. She led the mounted unit of the UW-Madison Police Department for 18 years, taking horses through the likes of Madison Halloween celebrations and football games.
Participants didn’t do anything like that Thursday, but they did get hands-on experience putting halters around trained police horses. They even learned how to make a temporary halter out of a rope.
Sgt. Tom Gilley with the Kenosha County Sheriff’s Office got some gentle ribbing from the group because he had “zero experience” with horses.
“I think I petted a horse once,” he said.
The brown and white mare, Ice, sensed Gilley was nervous and edged away, but Gilley soon got the rope around the mare and led her around the barn.
“If we’re really nervous and our blood pressure’s all crazy, they’re going to get upset,” Brogan said. “It’s your job to calm down.”
Gilley said the training will come in handy because his department often responds to loose horse calls.
“It’s definitely made me more comfortable around horses,” he said.
Janesville police officer Doug Johnson took the training because he’s the department’s certified humane officer. He said he doubts he’ll use the training in the city but could help out the Rock County Sheriff’s Office.
“If the county ever needs assistance with something (involving horses), I can help them because I’ve got the training,” he said.
The Wisconsin State Horse Council has two more training sessions scheduled for June— one in Waunakee and one in Sparta.
Council members hope to expand next year by offering more technical training in how to help large animals.
“We really have nothing like that in Wisconsin right now,” Brogan said. “There’s nobody you just call that knows what they’re doing if a horse is stuck in a bog or stuck on a cliff or whatever.”

May 15, 2009 at 7:59 p.m.
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This training would have come in handy for Delavan police a couple years ago. A friend and I were out for a girls night and almost hit a horse on the road by Lake Lawn. It did not belong to the resort but a nearby stable, two men in suit and tie were chasing it with a golf cart, they chased it right through someones garden. We walked alongside it and were able to find a rope and it walked right with us to a stall we found in a neary barn and the police then approached and handled it from there, it was very humorous since it did not end badly
May 15, 2009 at 4:21 p.m.
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Edie is an incredibly talented horse person. Glad she had a chance to give a seminar to local police. Hot Shot (her bay gelding mentioned above) is one of two horses she owns sired by my black Arabian stallion. He was special ordered by Edie while he was in his dam's tummy (a grey Percheron mare named Misty). Hot Shot was doing UW Football games at Camp Randall at the age of 3. Hopefully if an emergency situation happens involving horses, her demonstrations will assist local emergency personnel in working effectively with the horses involved.
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