Liberty For All, Service Dogs

Liberty For All, Service Dogs It is our goal to make service dogs easily accessible and affordable for ALL who are experiencing life-altering effects of trauma and medical diagnosis’.

Liberty for All, Service Dogs aims to build communities that have greater accessibility to crisis intervention and trauma response service animals. The newly formed non-profit organized exclusively to provide charitable access to trauma response interventions and service dogs specifically trained to address the needs of those suffering from trauma-related mental health disorders including but NOT

limited to military related trauma. Dogs are generously donated from “better breeder” recognized partner organizations, health tested, trained, and matched with handlers who apply and are accepted into the program. To apply, potential handlers will need to provide proof of trauma-related mental health diagnosis from a licensed Mental Health Provider, be currently receiving counseling, and be willing to undergo a home check/ show themselves or an approved caretaker are readily available and willing to properly care for a service dog.

If you have the most adorable pup around, and they are as much a part of your family as any human... here's a really fun...
02/26/2025

If you have the most adorable pup around, and they are as much a part of your family as any human... here's a really fun opportunity for ya -- POOCH PLAYOFFS!

I'll be photographing 16 dogs over the next few weeks, and they will go head-to-head in the cutest bracket ever at the end of March, competing for the title of Austin's ulti-mutt cutie! The best part is all session fees are benefiting a great dog charity called Liberty for All Service Dogs. Grab a spot before they’re gone!

Leave a photo of your pup in the comments if you’re interested!

All breeds welcome!

More details here ➡️ www.rachellockwoodphotography.com/pooch

Rachel Lockwood Photography

One of our K9s needs your help! https://www.zeffy.com/fundraising/6048af94-62e5-430e-aed8-d0e2248531f6This sweet boy ate...
10/21/2024

One of our K9s needs your help!

https://www.zeffy.com/fundraising/6048af94-62e5-430e-aed8-d0e2248531f6

This sweet boy ate something he shouldn’t have, as puppies sometimes do. He is in surgery now and could use your prayers and support!
His bill is $2000 for the surgery and supportive care.

If you have it in your heart, L4A team could really use your help as this puts a major dent in our veterinary budget.

“Cap” is in training for Medical Alert and in a foster home until task training and placement. He has a client identified and we are praying to get him back on his feet soon. Every penny helps! 🐕‍🦺❤️

09/11/2024

It was the dogs. The dogs are what got me.

A few years ago we visited the 9/11 Memorial Museum, and we saw a lot. Twisted steel girders. Baby-faced portraits of the deceased. Mutilated emergency vehicles.

But it was the dogs that wrecked me.

The dog exhibit is pretty small. Located in the far corner of the museum, with photographs of search and rescue dogs.

You see dogs nosing through rubble, wearing safety harnesses. You see them in their prime. They’re all deceased now. But they were spectacular.

There was Riley. Golden retriever. He was trained to find living people. But, he didn’t find any. Instead, he recovered the remains of firefighters. Riley kept searching for a live survivor, but found none. Riley’s morale tanked.

“I tried my best to tell Riley he was doing his job,” said his handler. “He had no way to know that when firefighters and police officers came over to hug him, and for a split second you can see them crack a smile—that Riley was succeeding at doing an altogether different job. He provided comfort. Or maybe he did know.”

There was Coby and Guiness. Black and yellow Labs. From California. Surfer dogs. They found dozens of human remains.

And Abigail. Golden Lab. Happy. Energetic. Committed. Big fan of bacon.

Sage. A border collie. Cheerful. Endless energy. Her first mission was searching the Pentagon wreckage after the attacks. She recovered the body of the terrorist who piloted American Airlines Flight 77.

Jenner. Black Lab. At age 9, he was one of the oldest dogs on the scene. Jenner’s handler, Ann Wichmann, remembers:

“It was 12 to 15 stories high of rubble and twisted steel. My first thought was, ‘I can't send Jenner into that…’ At one point, [Jenner] disappeared down a hole under the rubble and I was like, ‘Ugggggh!' Such a heart-stopping moment..."

Trakr. German Shepherd. Tireless worker. Worked until he couldn’t stand up anymore. Trakr found Genelle Guzman-McMillan, who was trapped for 27 hours among the debris. Genelle was as good as dead, until the cold nose poked through the mangled steel.

Apollo. German shepherd. An NYPD police dog. Coal-black muzzle. Liquid eyes. The first dog on the scene, only 15 minutes after the attacks. Apollo worked 18-hour days. Once, he was nearly killed in a fire during his search. But Apollo had been drenched in water and he was quick on his feet. No injuries.

Jake. Labrador. As a puppy, Jake was found on the side of the road in Dallas. Abandoned. Left for dead. Like trash. He had a dislocated hip and a broken leg. They made him a rescue dog.

Jake worked until his body threatened to collapse from exhaustion. After his shifts, local New York merchants saw his rescue-dog vest and treated him to free steak dinners in upscale Manhattan restaurants.

And, of course, there was Bretagne. Golden Retriever. Easygoing. Dutiful. Obsessed with food. Her owner and trainer, Denise Corliss, a firefighter from Harris County, Texas, brought Bretagne to Ground Zero while the rubble was still hot.

Bretagne went straight to work. She worked for 10 days solid. Ten agonizing days. Bretagne never quit. She napped onsite.

Denise recalls: “...There are images of Bretagne going to where she was directed to search, into the unknown, the chaotic environment. But even then, she knew who needed the comfort of a dog, and which firefighter needed to hold her close and stroke her fur.”

After 9/11, Bretagne also helped recovery efforts during the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, and Ivan. She retired at age 9.

Old age finally overtook her, she had a hard time using stairs, so Denise installed an above-ground pool to keep Bretagne’s joints limber.

In retirement, Bretagne became a reading dog at a local elementary school. First graders, too shy to read aloud, would read to a white-faced, elderly retriever who looked them in the eyes and smiled.

Bretagne visited students with special needs. She visited students with autism. She visited everyone.

She suffered kidney failure at age 16. She was put to sleep on June 7, 2016, and became the last of the 9/11 rescue dogs to end her earthly career.

Bretagne hobbled into the Cypress, Texas, animal hospital, one sunny Monday, only to discover the sidewalks and hallways were lined with firefighters, first responders, and rescue workers who saluted her.

Her remains were later escorted from the hospital, draped in an American flag.

We do not deserve dogs.

- Sean Dietrich

We hope you all are enjoying your summer as much as SD Lady and her handler are!! ❤️🐕‍🦺 www.L4Aservicedogs.org
07/09/2024

We hope you all are enjoying your summer as much as SD Lady and her handler are!! ❤️🐕‍🦺

www.L4Aservicedogs.org

05/27/2024
SD Lucky took her handler on a ✈️ trip last week. It was her first flight and we are proud of this team for their ex****...
05/23/2024

SD Lucky took her handler on a ✈️ trip last week. It was her first flight and we are proud of this team for their ex*****on of this, sometimes daunting, task. SD Lucky demonstrates a “tuck” in front of her handlers feet so as to stay out of the way of other passengers while still being able to attend her handler’s needs.

To sponsor this team or others, please visit our website at www.L4Aservicedogs.org ❤️

Thank you McDoodles of Texas LLC for your donation of SD Lucky! 🐕‍🦺

We are having an ESA open house on Saturday towards the end of our dog wash fundraiser!  Come meet the available dogs fr...
05/16/2024

We are having an ESA open house on Saturday towards the end of our dog wash fundraiser! Come meet the available dogs from 2:00-3:00PM. Thinking of adding a new bestie? Now is your chance!

ESAs are K9s that are not continuing in the Service Dog Program for various reasons. For a Service Dog Application, please visit our website L4Aservicedogs.org or email [email protected].

L4A SD Lady feat. School by day, party by night 🥳 To sponsor this team or others visit our website at www.L4Aservicedogs...
05/15/2024

L4A SD Lady feat. School by day, party by night 🥳

To sponsor this team or others visit our website at
www.L4Aservicedogs.org

Address

Copperas Cove, TX
76522

Telephone

+19196028859

Website

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