Los Angeles Times

Search continues

First responders are focusing on finding survivors amid the muck and wreckage.

- By Joe Mozingo, Brittny Mejia and Alene Tchekmedyi­an

MONTECITO, Calif. — In hard hats and gloves, the rescuers inched along the west side of Montecito Creek on Thursday, looking for signs of people buried in the rubble.

A red fluid trickled through the water at a culvert now packed with boulders. Robert Stine, the search manager, marked the spot on a GPS. Later, he’d have a search dog sniff it.

“It could be blood, or it might not be,” Stine said. “We can’t tell.”

About 20 feet down, in the creek, a searcher spotted a piece of a white sock with a blue stripe, caked in mud.

“We got an article of clothing!” he shouted, spray-painting a nearby rock orange. Again, Stine saved the coordinate­s.

And so, tediously, meticulous­ly, the searchers scoured the devastatio­n left behind after violent mudslides sent giant boulders

tumbling and powerful streams surging through neighborho­ods, sweeping homes off their foundation­s, mangling cars and taking at least 17 lives.

Hundreds of rescuers slogged though the destructio­n searching for survivors. But as time passed, their prospects turned more grim. Two days after Tuesday’s deluge, up to 43 people remained unaccounte­d for.

“There have been many miraculous stories of people lasting many days,” Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown told reporters Thursday afternoon. “We certainly are searching for a miracle right now.”

Back at Montecito Creek, a cadaver dog joined Stine’s crew and sniffed the marked areas but got no scent. The fluid was probably gear oil, they figured.

They packed up to go to the next spot.

Rescue teams carried shovels and crowbars and duct-taped their boots on so they wouldn’t lose them in the mud. They trudged past broken tables and fallen trees. One rescuer picked up a crumpled Polaroid photograph covered in dirt.

They probed at the muck with poles, feeling for hidden hazards: pools, open manholes or septic tanks lurking below.

“It’s essentiall­y quicksand,” said Capt. Mark Seastrom of the Ventura County Fire Department. “If there’s a hole, we’ll fall and keep going until hitting the bottom.”

On Thursday, search teams finally got into some neighborho­ods buried beneath mud and blocked by wreckage. Ventura County Fire Capt. Bob Schuett was staring at a map of Montecito as his partner drove along a ravaged roadway.

The duo led a crew of 43 assigned to find stranded residents in northeaste­rn Montecito on Park Lane, Romero Canyon Road, Bella Vista Drive and East Valley Road. Some of those reported missing live in the area, said Schuett, whose team has rescued at least six people this week.

Off East Valley Road, a five-member team from San Diego and two search dogs, Stella and Decker, convened at the entrance of a destroyed property.

“OK, search,” handler Brent Brainard called out to Decker, a black Labrador and Weimaraner mix. Decker raced off along debris piles in the backyard, trying to catch a scent of survivors.

When people survive disasters, Brainard said, they tend to find empty spaces where they can wait things out. Brainard kept a close eye on Decker as he balanced on piles of trees reaching to the house’s second story.

As each pile was searched, pink tape was placed on its trees to show that it had been checked.

As Decker moved closer to the house, however, he was suddenly swallowed by mud.

“Oh … a swimming pool!” Brainard shouted. “Decker just went in!”

After scrambling to rescue Decker, it was Stella’s turn to investigat­e the area. She disappeare­d into the pool, too — this time at the other end.

When both dogs were back on solid ground and had shaken off the muck, the team prepared to move on, but not before leaving a warning for the next team to enter the premises. They tagged the wall outside the property: “pool.”

Had Decker or Stella found a survivor, the dogs would have been rewarded with toys. Stella, who is missing half of her jaw after having a tumor removed in June, gets a soft plush toy.

“We’ve never had to go through mud like that,” said Matthew Kirk, Stella’s handler of eight years. “It’s definitely very challengin­g.”

Conditions in Montecito were entirely new for the San Diego team.

“I haven’t been on anything like this in California before,” said Brainard, who has had Decker for four years.

The devastatio­n reminded Scott Fuller, a logistics team manager with the search crew, of what Hurricane Katrina left behind.

“This is next level — the trees, the electrical wires, the gas we just discovered. This place is a wreck,” Fuller said. “I look at this and I go, how are these people ever going to recover from this? But they will. With resilience, help from the state and feds, a lot of hard work — they will somehow.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? AN L.A. COUNTY search and rescue team surveys the boulders and debris under Ashley Road in Montecito, Calif., on Thursday.
Photograph­s by Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times AN L.A. COUNTY search and rescue team surveys the boulders and debris under Ashley Road in Montecito, Calif., on Thursday.
 ??  ?? A SEARCHER holds a dirt-covered photograph found along a creek in Montecito. Teams duct-taped their boots on so they wouldn’t lose them in the mud.
A SEARCHER holds a dirt-covered photograph found along a creek in Montecito. Teams duct-taped their boots on so they wouldn’t lose them in the mud.
 ?? Photograph­s by Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? FIREFIGHTE­RS work to clear debris from a home on Olive Mill Road in Montecito on Thursday after search dogs alerted to a possible body buried in the muck.
Photograph­s by Al Seib Los Angeles Times FIREFIGHTE­RS work to clear debris from a home on Olive Mill Road in Montecito on Thursday after search dogs alerted to a possible body buried in the muck.
 ??  ?? COAST GUARD members inspect mangled cars on a beach in Montecito. One rescuer said the mudslides’ devastatio­n was reminiscen­t of Hurricane Katrina.
COAST GUARD members inspect mangled cars on a beach in Montecito. One rescuer said the mudslides’ devastatio­n was reminiscen­t of Hurricane Katrina.

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