Los Angeles Times

Crew comes to the rescue of missing pets

Retired detective leads team that looks for animals missing after fires, disasters.

- GARY WARTH gary.warth @sduniontri­bune.com Warth writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

A retired detective leads a team that looks for animals missing after fires and other disasters.

SAN DIEGO — Kenneth Bettencour­t used to search for missing people and investigat­e homicides.

These days, he’s the guy you may call if your dog runs away.

“I’ve always loved animals, and when I retired in ’95, my wife said, ‘You’ve got to find something else to do,’ ” the former police detective said.

Bettencour­t, 78, formed Animal Rescue Shelter and Patrol in 2013, using the garage of his home in the community of Del Mar Heights as a kennel to hold stray pets he found until they were reunited with their owners.

About six months ago, his nonprofit merged with the United States Service Command of America, an Illinois-based nonprofit that has focused mostly on disaster relief.

Under the new venture, Bettencour­t said he has put together a canine rescue team that will be used to find people trapped in collapsed buildings and other emergency situations. He is working with a trainer who has about five people on the team, he said.

He also has added a new team of volunteers certified through training with the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals to help law enforcemen­t during wildfires and other emergencie­s. Besides helping direct traffic and performing other duties, the team will corral pets that may have fled and are in danger.

If successful, the Animal Rescue Ready Reserve could be replicated in other areas around the country, said Joseph Howe, the only surviving founder of seven who created the U.S. Service Command of America in the early 1990s.

Howe said he met Bettencour­t a few years ago and was impressed with his mission. Howe said he reached out to Bettencour­t to help him expand the animal rescue effort as a pilot program under his national group.

It’s a lofty goal for the small, independen­t nonprofit, which has about 100 members. Howe said it once had about 1,000 and had performed a variety of duties, but has scaled down and refocused in recent years.

In addition to having a military-sounding name, members of the group have military-sounding ranks. Howe goes by Lt. Gen. Howe, and Bettencour­t said his title is chief of disaster relief.

Bettencour­t wears a uniform and goes on patrol in a pickup, supplied by the U.S. Service Command of America, that sports an eye-catching logo with the silhouette of a horse, dog and cat with flames in the background.

The idea may sound quirky, but the timing could be right. California wildfires are becoming larger and more frequent, and there has been no official group that dispatches trained volunteers to rescue dogs and cats.

A few years ago, Bettencour­t said he saw that need and thought he could fill it.

“I was thinking about what I did as a missing persons detective, and I said I could apply that to find missing pets,” he said.

Bettencour­t had worked much of his career as a police officer in Oakland before deciding to finish his career in the quiet town of Gold Hill, Ore.

The town of about 1,000 turned out to have a serious problem, he learned. Far off the freeway but near the route drug runners use between Canada and Los Angeles, Gold Hill turned out to be an ideal place to dump bodies after deals went bad. A couple of bodies were discovered every other month, Bettencour­t said, keeping the homicide detective busy.

Retiring in 1995, he came to San Diego and took a job for a few years working security for North County Transit. He then did some investigat­ive work for defense attorneys, which Bettencour­t said he found disagreeab­le, before getting the idea to become his own version of “Ace Ventura: Pet Detective.”

So far no team members have been deployed to help out in a disaster or emergency. In the meantime, he or another volunteer are out twice a week on patrols to help people find missing pets.

About four calls come in a week from people who find him on internet searches or who are referred by animal care facilities.

The nonprofit operates on a budget of about $50,000 a year, and Bettencour­t said he’s launching a campaign to raise $100,000 to get a kennel. He also hopes to create classes that will certify its volunteers who now are trained by the SPCA.

 ?? K.C. Alfred San Diego Union-Tribune ?? KENNETH BETTENCOUR­T, searching for a missing cat in Del Mar, taps his skills as a police detective to find missing pets. He works with a nonprofit that assists humans and pets during fires and other emergencie­s.
K.C. Alfred San Diego Union-Tribune KENNETH BETTENCOUR­T, searching for a missing cat in Del Mar, taps his skills as a police detective to find missing pets. He works with a nonprofit that assists humans and pets during fires and other emergencie­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States