military K-9

Former Navy SEAL Trains Dogs to Find and Attack Active Shooters in Schools

A dog trained by veteran Joshua Morton to respond to school shootings will start working in a school for the first time in January.

A former Navy SEAL is making headlines for using his skills as a K-9 handler in the military to train dogs to respond to gunfire in schools by tracking down the gunman.

Joshua Morton of Iowa originally started training police dogs when he returned from his final overseas, NBC Washington reported. But when he started mass shootings and how assault weapons were used to perpetrate violence in schools, Morton decided to start training dogs to respond to active shooter situations.

"I did not expect to see what I saw overseas, to see it in schools. But, unfortunately, it's happening," Morton told NBC. "I've been trying to find this solution for a very long time."

That idea has culminated in a Minnesota school preparing to receive one of Morton’s dogs in January, along with a trained K-9 handler. The price tag is high, at $125,000 per year for a dog and a handler, but Morton believes it’s worth it to ensure student safety.

During training, the dogs are taught to use their senses to find the room where they heard the gunshots and go after the person handling the gun. Morton is currently working with five puppies who are clones of his original training dog. The veteran said cloning the dogs makes their behavior and response to training more consistent. 

Morton acknowledged that in the event of an active shooter, the trainer is sending the dog as a “canary,” or a distraction, so that the gunman will direct its attention to the animal instead of people and commit fewer casualties.

"It's a hard pill to swallow but I'm sorry, it's reality,” he said. “I would rather it be him than a child or somebody else."

Administrators at an Iowa school expressed skepticism about some of the logistics of keeping the dog and handler on campus, including where the dog would stay during the school day and who the district would hire to handle the animal.

But Morton said it’s imperative that veterans and others who have experience dealing with active shooter scenarios are put in the position to help save lives with their trained K-9s.

“You can't expect your gym teacher to do this," Morton said.

About the Author

Haley Samsel is an Associate Content Editor for the Infrastructure Solutions Group at 1105 Media.

Featured

  • Wireless Lock

    Streamlining Secure Access

    International House Berkeley upgraded access control across its historic residence using wireless locks integrated with existing security systems, improving safety, efficiency, and user experience for staff and residents. Read Now

  • Video Surveillance Storage

    Pay-as-You-Grow Storage Model

    By subsidizing hardware costs and using patent-pending ALICE1 technology, Cozaint enables organizations to retain months -not days- of critical AI-ready video surveillance data. Read Now

  • Empty School Hallway

    AI Supports Human Operators

    School security strengthened with use of newest technology Read Now

    • Artificial Intelligence
  • Meeting of Healthcare Workers

    Healthcare Trends Report 2026: AI, Workforce Strain, and Rising Safety Risks

    Healthcare leaders are rethinking strategy as financial pressure, workforce burnout, workplace violence, and expanding AI adoption reshape care delivery. Read Now

    • Artificial Intelligence