Animals @ Home // General Issues
If Your Companion Animal is Missing
Every year about 5 million companion animals are reported missing-an estimated 2 million of them are stolen. Stolen dogs and cats may be used in dogfights, cult rituals, and other slow tortures “for fun”—and many are stolen and sold for use in experiments. Hundreds of thousands of docile, friendly lost and stolen dogs and cats suffer and die in experiments every year. Click here for more information about animal dealers.
Your Dog Is Gone
1) File “missing” reports at veterinarians’ offices, the police department, and animal control. Follow up in person to make sure that a case of mistaken identity is not hampering a reunion with your companion animal.2) Comb the neighborhood, paying special attention to spaces under porches, shrubs, and cars, as well as sheds, drain pipes, and other hiding places that might attract your frightened friend. Cover at least a 2-mile radius.
- Go out at night, and call his or her name, loudly and clearly, and do this throughout your neighborhood. Take a flashlight with you and check the sewers.
- Talk to all your neighbors! And by neighbors, I mean everyone in a 1-mile radius (that's probably a lot of houses, but you need to do it).
- Pay neighborhood kids to search and ask questions. They'll enjoy the detective work and very likely might learn something.
4) Post “missing” fliers, including a current photo that accurately portrays your companion animal-do not use one that is dated and misrepresents his or her appearance. At the top of your flier, write “REWARD,” and at the bottom list your home, work, and cell phone numbers.
- Keep the description vague or you may cause someone who has seen or rescued your animal to assume that he or she is not your lost friend. For example, many lost animals lose their collars—someone might think that your dog isn’t the one on the poster simply because he or she is no longer wearing a red collar.
- Do not list the animal’s name or behavioral traits. Lost animals often do not respond to their names or may behave differently when they are frightened.
- Don’t hint that you think your friend has been stolen, i.e., don’t say, “No questions asked,” as it may discourage a rescuer from calling, worried that he or she will be accused of theft.
- Post your fliers at veterinary offices, animal control, pet and grooming shops, dog parks, schools, libraries, grocery stores—any place that displays a public bulletin board. Post large posters when posting outdoors to make the information easier to read by those driving by.
- Contact the media right away with your reward offer.
6) Place “lost” advertisements in all the local and weekly newspapers. Many publications will place such ads free of charge. Check the “found” ads every day.
7) Hire a pet detective. Fee-based, professional pet detectives are trained how, when, and where to search for lost pets using law enforcement–based investigative techniques. Learn more about pet detectives.
8) If two weeks pass, update your flier. A rain-soaked, tattered flier can look months old to someone who might think the animal on your flier is long gone and can’t be the same animal he or she has just rescued from busy traffic.
9) Don’t give up. It’s not uncommon for lost companion animals and their guardians to be reunited weeks or even months after becoming lost. It can be frustrating, but your perseverance will increase your chances of finding your lost friend.




