Parcel Interdiction: What's in the box?
Parcel interdiction is vital part of the war on drug trafficking and how to effectively utilize a parcel interdiction program as part of the overall strategy to reduce the flow of illegal drugs and drug proceeds.











Class overview
Parcel interdiction is vital part of the war on drug trafficking and how to effectively utilize a parcel interdiction program as part of the overall strategy to reduce the flow of illegal drugs and drug proceeds. The proper use and training of the narcotic canines is critically important to the success of the interdiction operation. Learn how to start a parcel interdiction program, how to train and use dogs to assist detectives and best operational practices for a parcel interdiction unit.
1.Starting a program
2. Reading the labels (what is suspicious?)
3. How to set up the K9 sniff
4. Parcel affidavit
5.Parcel Case Laws
6. Layers of concealment
7. Documentation and follow-up
8. Controlled Deliveries
This session explains:
- Parcel interdiction is vital part of the war on drug trafficking and how to effectively utilize a parcel interdiction program as part of the overall
- The proper use and training of the narcotic canines is critically important to the success of the interdiction operation.
- Learn how to start a parcel interdiction program, how to train and use dogs to assist detectives and best operational practices for a parcel
- Reading the labels (what is suspicious?) 3.






Gary Hadden
Officer Gary Hadden is currently a Criminal Interdiction Unit K9 handler and Trainer for the Indianapolis Metro Police Department and is also a Task Force Officer for Homeland Security Investigations. Officer Hadden started his career in Broward County Florida in 1990 and became a K9 handler in 1995. Hadden has worked many interdiction details in South Florida, including the Blue Lightning Task Force, Multi-jurisdictional counter drug task force and Broward County Pipe-Line Task Force. Hadden has worked multiple canines (Patrol, Narcotics and Bomb) over his thirty-year k9 career and has been on thousands of deployments. Officer Hadden Joined the Marion County Sheriff’s Department, Indiana in 1998 which later merged to become the current Indianapolis Metro P.D. Hadden has been training k9 teams for many years and continues to be the head trainer for IMPD’s Narcotic detection, Cadaver, missing persons and Arson dog teams. Hadden is also a certified instructor through the Drug Interdiction Acceptance Program-El Paso Intelligence Center (DIAP-EPIC) and teaches k9 and interdiction courses throughout the Nation. Officer Hadden has published articles in Police Canine Magazines, testifies as an expert on the narcotic contamination of U.S. currency and has conducted training on currency contamination for local and Federal prosecutors as well as the Indiana Attorney General’s Office. Hadden continues to run a parcel interdiction program at the FedEx Hub at the Indianapolis Airport, where drugs and drug trafficking proceeds in the millions have been seized. Detective Hadden has been imprinting and training canine teams for the detection of Fentanyl and has given presentations on the imprinting and training on Fentanyl detection and court testimony.








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Legal defensibility is not theoretical. It is tested in court.
This class helps handlers and agencies prepare before that moment arrives.

Explore other HITS classes
The Drug Canine Legal Update is one part of a broader HITS program designed to strengthen deployment judgment, detection reliability, and operational decision-making in the field. Additional sessions expand that learning across tracking, behavior, detection science, and tactical leadership.









