The American Hero Dog of 2014 will be announced tonight at the fourth annual American Humane Association Hero Dog Awards at The Beverly Hilton.
The winner is determined by a combination of votes cast by the public and by a celebrity panel that included singer Naomi Judd, television personality Lisa Vanderpump and actress Bailee Madison.
The finalists, who were each selected as the leading Hero Dogs in their category, are:
– Kal, the San Antonio Fire Department’s 6-year-old black Labrador, who has participated in more than 200 investigations and helps educate children on fire safety;
– Xena, a pit bull from Johns Creek, Georgia, who was adopted by a family with a boy with autism. Xena’s arrival in the boy’s household helped
transform him from being silent to constantly singing to and talking with her;
– XXon, a guide dog for an Air Force staff sergeant from Bloomfield, Connecticut, left blinded by an explosion in Afghanistan;
– Kota, a Winchester (Virginia) Police Department canine who was injured in an eight-foot fall while responding to a burglary in progress, but
still was able to help the human officers finish the call, fighting with a severely fractured limb to ensure their safety;
– Chaney, a Labrador who served multiple tours in Iraq and Afghanistan as an improvised explosive device detection dog. He was adopted by one of his handlers who lives in Waverly, Iowa, and they spend many hours volunteering with Retrieving Freedom, a nonprofit organization that trains service dogs for disabled veterans and children with autism;
– Bretagne, who served as a search-and-rescue dog following the 2001 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, at the 2002 Winter Olympics and
after Hurricane Rita in 2005. She lives in Cypress, Texas, and visits elementary schools, helping first-graders learn to read;
– JJ Krawczyk, a service dog partnered with a girl from Apex, North Carolina, diagnosed with mastocytosis, which can cause severe reactions for
her. The one-time shelter dog can detect when reactions are about to occur, alerting the girl’s parents that her life might be in danger; and
– Susie, a pit bull mix from High Point, North Carolina, who was beaten, burned and abandoned, then became part of the effort that changed North
Carolina’s animal cruelty laws.
All eight finalists will receive $1,500 for their charity chosen from among the awards’ 15 charity partners. The winner will receive an additional
$5,000 for their charity partner.
The ceremony will be hosted by actor James Denton and television personality Beth Stern. Presenters include Oscar-winner Marlee Matlin, and
actresses Pauley Perrette, Lacey Chabert and Lori Laughlin.
The ceremony will also be shown Oct. 30 on the Hallmark Channel.