The police service dog of slain Moncton RCMP Const. Dave Ross will be partnered with another officer, say the RCMP.
Ross was one of three Mounties shot and killed in the line of duty in the New Brunswick city last week.
His German shepherd, Danny, touched hearts across the nation during the regimental funeral on Tuesday as he whimpered throughout the service.
"Anytime Danny barked at home, it would be to get Dave to open the truck door so they could go to work," Ross's widow, Rachael Ross, said in a statement on Wednesday.
"It wouldn't be fair to Danny to retire him, as he loved his work as much as Dave did," she said.
The process of returning Danny to work will begin when a handler in need of a police service dog is identified, said RCMP spokeswoman Const. Jullie Rogers-Marsh.
The RCMP have received "a high number of requests" from the media and the public about Danny's future, said Rogers-Marsh.
Police service dogs rarely change handlers, but it has happened a few times when a handler left the program or retired, she said.
"While Danny too is grieving for his handler, he will have the opportunity to continue on to a rewarding career."
Ross and Danny began working together on Dec. 4, 2012, and started formal training on April 22, 2013.
They graduated from the Police Dog Service Training Centre on Aug. 30, 2013 — less than a year before Ross was killed.