 A marine injured in Afghanistan completes the Boston Marathon and a clever double dog finds his way home. All this and more, this week on The Core Report. A marine's clever canine escaped from the vet and went on the lam in Virginia April 10th, 2017. General, a great Pyrenees, was caught on camera opening several doors with his nose and busting out of Akia Garrison Animal Hospital in Stafford, Virginia. He has since been reunited with his owner, Lieutenant Colonel Stephen T. Campbell. According to Campbell, General was rescued in 2012 by the family and within two days of coming home was opening locked doors by himself and has been doing so ever since. A Japanese soldier is about to make history at Marine Corps Air Station New River. Sergeant First Class Mizuru Miyazaki is slated to be Japan's first soldier to be a crew chief of an MV-22 Osprey at Marine Medium Tilt Rotor Squadron 204. So far, Miyazaki has been learning the ground service and basic knowledge of the Osprey in order to learn about the crew chief's mindset. Prior to training with Squadron 204, Miyazaki was a crew chief for the CH-47 Chinook in the Japanese Ground Self Defense Force. Staff Sergeant Jose Luis Sanchez, a marine who lost the lower part of his left leg in Afghanistan in 2011, completed the Boston Marathon April 17th. Sanchez completed the race in almost six hours, carrying an American flag gifted to him by his patrol unit as he recovered in the hospital. Well, I wanted to not only recognize better at the stuff, but everyone that thinks that they're not able to do something. He previously ran the Boston Marathon and Marine Corps Marathon in Washington D.C. last year, carrying the same flag. Semper Fi, Staff Sergeant. That's all for this week on The Crew Report.