Search dogs lead hunt for more victims of Montecito mudslide

Melissa Etehad and Brittny Mejia
Los Angeles Times

The small white border collie with black spots ran up the side of what used to be a roof of a house at Olive Mill and Hot Springs roads with his handler, Capt. Davis Doty of the Orange County Fire Authority. “Kneel!” Doty yelled at Jester. He obeyed.

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For first responders searching through the mud and wreckage, their furry companions become more than just assistants.

Jester with Region Task Force 10 checks debris for bodies on Olive Mill Road on Wednesday in Montecito.

“We spend hours every day together, bonding and training,” Doty said. “He’s great.”

Jester is one of several search-and-rescue dogs scouring the mud and rubble after Tuesday’s deadly mudslide.

The dogs are a key piece of the rescue effort in a neighborhood of Montecito buried by mud. 

Read more:Death toll rises from Santa Barbara County mudslides

Jester and the other dogs were trained by the National Disaster Search Dog Foundation, a nonprofit that rescues shelter dogs and trains them for disaster search-and-rescue work. The organization then provides them free of charge to handlers at fire departments and other first-response agencies.

Even though the foundation’s 125-acre facility in Santa Paula was damaged when the Thomas Fire swept through, burning parts of the dog-training area, and staff and dogs had to evacuate for 18 days, Sanders said they remained dedicated to continuing their mission.

“It never gets old to see the search-and-rescue dogs doing their job.”

Julie Purcell, Region Task Force 10, walks with her two dogs Xero and Jester after checking debris for bodies on Olive Mill Road in Montecito on Wednesday.

Sanders said Jester was set to be euthanized after his owners left him at a shelter. She said Jester graduated the training school in 2008.

Jester is eager to work. His eyes remained glued to Doty as they walked side by side through the mud. Doty said Jester hasn’t found any survivors.

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“I can’t believe I’m standing in Montecito,” Doty said as he and Jester got ready to press on with their search. “I’ve never seen anything like this.”

Xero, another search dog, worked her way up a tangle of trees and muds, trying to catch any scent of someone alive in debris piles along Hot Springs Road.

The nearly 4-year-old dog and her handler, Julie Purcell, arrived in the area Tuesday afternoon and started working Wednesday morning. Xero was just certified last March and this is their first real search, said Purcell, 52.

“This is her first time, so she’s pretty wound up,” Purcell said. “There are a lot of places to search, a lot of work to do for everybody.”

Xero is very independent and willing to go into places and search very easily, Purcell said. “I always wanted to do this. I brought her specifically for this,” she said.

“It’s very overwhelming,” Purcell said of the scene in Montecito. “The pictures you see on TV and the news are quite different from what you see when you’re here in real life and you realize the scope of it ... It’s devastating seeing the damage and knowing how hard it’s going to be for so many people to move on.”

“If we’re able to save a life, that’s wonderful. But I think the most ideal thing would be if we were to clear this whole area and not find anybody in here at all and just have property damage to deal with,” Purcell said.

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