K9 ‘Jax’ joins Flagler County Sheriff’s Office

(L-R) Undersheriff Rick Staly, Commander Chris Sepe, Corporal Jon Welker and K9 Jax, Deanna Padovani-DePaco, Sheriff James L. Manfre, Honorary Consul of Portugal, Caesar DePaco, Ph.D., and Consultant Eddie Branquinho. (PHOTO/Flagler County Sheriff’s Office)
(L-R) Undersheriff Rick Staly, Commander Chris Sepe, Corporal Jon Welker and K9 Jax, Deanna Padovani-DePaço, Sheriff James L. Manfre, Honorary Consul of Portugal, Caesar DePaço, Ph.D., and Consultant Eddie Branquinho. (PHOTO/Flagler County Sheriff’s Office)

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The Flagler County Sheriff’s Office has a new K9 thanks to the generosity of the Honorary Consulate of Portugal, Caesar DePaço of Summit Nutritionals International. ®

K-9 “Jax” was donated by Caesar DePaço, Ph.D., Honorary Consulate of Portugal, and his wife Deanna Padovani-DePaço.

“This is the first time the Flagler County Sheriff’s Office has received a donated canine,” said Special Operations Commander, Chris Sepe. “These dogs are invaluable to law enforcement and we cannot thank the DePaço’s enough for their contribution.”

K-9 Jax, a two year old yellow lab, came from the Vohne Liche Kennels in Denver, Indiana at a cost of approximately $10,000.

The Sheriff’s Office says K-9 Jax will be utilized as an explosives detection canine.

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2015 Summit Nutritionals International  ®

Portuguese Honorary Consulate Coming to Palm Coast

As Palm Coast’s new city hall goes up in Town Center, two rooms in the bottom floor of the Chiumento building across the lake from it will be remade to accommodate another government body: the Portuguese Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

The ministry will use the space as an honorary Summit Nutritionals International - Caesar DePacoconsulate to replace a consulate in Orlando that must be shut down because its lease is ending, said Palm Coast Holdings Vice President David Lusby. Palm Coast Holdings owns the space the honorary consulate will be leasing.

“We really wanted them in Town Center and in that building — it’s an important user coming to Palm Coast,” Lusby said. “This is a pretty big deal, because there are people who have to do business with the Portuguese consulate from all over Florida or even further than Florida who will come to Palm Coast.”

The Portuguese government will rent temporary space on the building’s third floor as the lower floor is renovated to its specifications.

“We have a signed lease for temporary space on the third floor, and we’re currently negotiating a lease with them for two units on the ground floor for the consulate to relocate to Palm Coast,” Lusby said in an interview Jan. 12. “We’ll probably have that in their hands tomorrow. All of the basic terms have bee agreed to, and I don’t anticipate any problems,” he added.

The honorary consulate, to be named after the Summit Nutritionals ® CEO, Caesar DePaço, Ph.D. would pay $1 per month for the temporary space on the third floor of the Chiumento building for up to about five months while the two units on the bottom floor, units 105 and 106, are reworked for its use, Lusby said.Caesar DePaco, Ph.D. - Summit Nutritionals

Then, according to the lease that is being finalized, it would pay about $4,500 per month for the roughly 2,850 square feet of first-floor space, he said.

“Very initial conversations” about the use of the space for the honorary consulate began just before Christmas 2014, Lusby said. The number of employees at the site, he said, will probably be fairly minimal: probably a consular general and vice consular general, and four or five employees.

Portuguese American Cultural Center President Eddie Branquinho, who has been working with Dr. DePaço on the non-diplomatic aspects of coordinating the honorary consulate’s move to Palm Coast, said it will have to be accredited by the State Department before it begins diplomatic functioning, a process that has already begun and usually takes several months.

Once that happens, Branquinho said, the honorary consulate will be able to handle legal documentation and representation of Portuguese citizens on behalf of the Portuguese government. Honorary consulates do not issue visas.

Portugal has an embassy in Washington, D.C., six full consulates, and 12 honorary consulates, according to the official Embassy of Portugal to the Unites States website. The nearest — other than the Orlando location, which is no longer on the list and is being shut down for the move — is an honorary consulate in Miami, according to the site.

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Summit Nutritionals, Inc.  ®

New Jersey Couple Treks Around US Donating K-9 Dogs

Caesar DePaço, Ph.D. of Summit Nutritionals International ®, donated his first K-9 police dog, Kondro, to the Hillsborough Police Department in 2013. Two years later, he and his wife, Deanna Padovani-DePaço, have helped 13 dogs find homes in agencies around the country, including New Jersey.

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Bernardsville –1 A township couple is making a difference in the country one K-9 at a time.

Caesar DePaço, Ph.D. donated his first K-9 police dog, Kondro, to the Hillsborough Police Department in 2013. Two years later, he and his wife, Deanna Padovani-DePaço, have helped 13 dogs find homes in agencies around the country, including New Jersey.

“It became addicting and very gratifying to my husband to help these police departments,” Deanna Padovani-DePaço said Friday by phone. The couple were in the car returning from Virginia, where they helped departments in Roanoke and Harrisonburg acquire K-9 dogs.

“It feels super great to see the emotion and the reaction of the recipients of the dogs,” Padovani-DePaço said. “They are always so humble and grateful.”

Obtaining a K-9 police dog can be a large expense to a department, Padovani-DePaço said. Dogs cost around $10,000 each depending on their capabilities and training. It’s an expense Padovani-DePaço said some police departments cannot afford, especially when something unexpectedly happens to a K-9 dog.4

In Oklahoma City, Sgt. Ryan Stark’s K-9 partner, Kye, died after a man who ran from police stabbed him three times in August, according to a local media report. Five months later, Stark was back on the streets with his new dog, Kayne, thanks to the DePaço’s.

“It’s almost like a blessing, because they (police departments) don’t know where they would of obtained the funds or budgets to obtain a K-9,” Deanna Padovani-DePaço said.

Knowing that, the DePaço’s monitor the media and keep an eye on the Internet for any unfortunate news of a department in need of a K-9.

Just this Thursday, a police dog was shot dead in Southern California during a police standoff with a man barricaded in a residence. The dog, Sultan, entered the residence through a small crawlspace and sustained a life-ending gunshot inside the home, local media reports said.

The DePaço’s K-9 officer liaison, Hillsborough Township Police Officer Chris Engelhardt, already has a call out to the department to see if they need help replacing Sultan.3

“These people, they don’t have to do this,” said Engelhardt, who was the recipient of the DePaço’s first donated dog, Kondro. “This is their own money and it helps the townships out, especially in New Jersey. They go above and beyond what they have to do.”

Perhaps the DePaço’s generosity stems from their gratitude they have for the United States. Caesar DePaço is a product of the American Dream. A European citizen who came to the country 20 years ago, DePaço started Branchburg-based Summit Nutritionals International, a leader in manufacturing U.S.-made raw nutritional supplements.

A message on the company website sums up how DePaço feels about the United States.

“Caesar DePaço reminds us to … ‘ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country,'” the words made famous by the late former President John F. Kennedy.

“He lives by and tries to fulfill it as best as possible,” Deanna Padovani-DePaço said.

Caesar DePaço always had a love for dogs and an admiration for law enforcement, his wife says. So in 2013, he donated the funds to help the Hillsborough Police Department acquire a new K-9 police dog after its former dog, Raider, retired from service.

Since then, the Deal Police Department in Monmouth County and the Morris County Sheriff’s Department have received dogs thanks to DePaço. Outside of New Jersey, the DePaço’s have helped agencies in Kansas City, Florida, Oklahoma City and Virginia.

The dogs all come from the same kennel in Denver, Ind., Vohne Liche Kennels. The kennel has a “prominent reputation” in the industry, Deanna Padovani-DePaço said. Owned and operated by a former Marine, Vohne Liche helps train dogs for the CIA and other government agencies, she said.2

Police departments contact Vohne Liche directly so they can provide a dog that fits every department’s specific needs, Padovani-DePaço said.

Caesar DePaço also donates bullet proof vests for the dogs — a cost of roughly $3,000 — and gift cards to Petco for food and other supplies. In total, each department receives a donation of around $13,000.

“They’re doing a lot of great things,” said Engelhardt, the Hillsborough officer. “And it’s non-stop work. They go out and meet these dogs, take out the families and trainers to a nice dinner.”

But to the DePaço family, this is just one way for them to give back — and hopefully motivate others to do the same.

“We’re very involved in the community and we’re trying to put a stamp on the nation and show people that it’s easy to help,” Deanna Padovani-DePaço said. “And we love to give back. There’s no catch.”

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