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Bringing The Lost Home Project Adds Five New Florida Sheriff’s Offices

The Bringing The Lost Home Project Adds Five New Florida Sheriff’s Offices in 2021-2022

Tallahassee, Florida (Nov. 23, 2021) – Escambia, Charlotte, Nassau, DeSoto, and Putnam Counties have been named as the five new Florida Sheriff’s Offices to receive missing person response training, scent discriminate K9 training, and Scent Kit program resources through the highly successful Bringing The Lost Home Project legislative bill. The Bringing The Lost Home Project bill was sponsored by Florida House Representative, Scott Plakon and signed into law by Florida Governor, Ron DeSantis, in June 2021.

Scent Evidence K9 CEO, Paul Coley, and The Alzheimer’s Project CEO, John Trombetta, partnered to introduce the bill in 2019 to help law enforcement better serve their populations with Alzheimer’s/Related Dementia and autism who are at high risk of wandering and going missing. The Bringing The Lost Home Project enhances missing person response capabilities and recovery success by raising missing person awareness, mitigating risk, and improving search performance through the use of scent trailing recognition assessments, K-9 and Handler training, and scent collection technology.

Bringing The Lost Home Project partners John Trombetta and Paul Coley
The Alzheimer’s Project Executive Director, John Trombetta and Scent Evidence K9 CEO, Paul Coley
In 2021, the Bringing The Lost Home Project will be implemented in Desoto, Escambia, Charlotte, Nassau, and Putnam Counties and will enable the Sheriff’s Offices to introduce and maintain a proven and effective missing person response and location program for populations with Alzheimer’s Disease, dementia, autism, and other cognitive disabilities who are at high-risk of wandering. Past participants have used the project resources to find over 100 missing persons in Florida in the last 2 years and have protected thousands of Floridians who are in high-risk wandering groups by distributing Scent Preservation Kits and raising missing person awareness in their communities.
The project is focused on recovering individuals who have a propensity to wander or elope with a rapid search response and recovery. The bill provides Scent Preservation Kits® or “Scent Kits” to families with loved ones living with Alzheimer’s Disease or related dementia (ADRD), and autism.

The Alzheimer’s Project will identify groups and areas in need of services and will help educate community residents about the Scent Kits and Missing Person Awareness for at-risk groups.
The bill also includes Missing Person Response Protocol and Scent Discriminate K-9 Training conducted by Scent Evidence K9 CEO, Paul Coley for the participating agencies. The training impacts law enforcement response capabilities by increasing search success and decreasing the time and resources needed to find missing persons and bring them home safe.

The Bringing The Lost Home Pilot Project was introduced in Florida in 2019 and has been successfully implemented by 8 Florida Sheriff’s Offices and Police Departments. (Bay, Sumter, St. Johns, Lee, Marion, Franklin, and Seminole Counties, and the Tallahassee Police Dept.) K9 Teams who have received the training have seen a dramatic increase in their search capabilities with many handlers having multiple life-saving K9 locations within a few days of completing the training. Their success numbers continue to climb and the number of K9 finds by Florida agencies surpassed 100 in Oct. 2021.

Nassau County Sheriff's Office K9 Training
Nassau County Sheriff’s Office Bringing The Lost Home Project K9 Training

Protecting and Recovering People At Risk of Wandering
Florida has the second-largest Alzheimer’s Disease population in the U.S. with over 580,000 residents living with the disease. That number is projected to climb to 720,000 by 2025. Studies show that 60% or 3 of every 5 persons with Alzheimer’s Disease or dementia will wander and go missing. The numbers are almost as high for children with autism. The American Pediatric Association states that 50% of those with children with autism will wander/elope and go missing at least once before age 17.
Scent Evidence K9 CEO, Paul Coley has made it his company’s mission to not only improve missing person response capabilities for communities but to protect individuals before they go missing.
Coley created The Scent Preservation Kit® or “Scent Kit” to give families and caregivers an effective tool to pre-collect a persons scent before they go missing and provide responders with a pre-collected uncontaminated scent article before the search begins. Click here to see the Action News Jacksonville Scent Kit Story.

Law enforcement uses K9 scent kits to make sure missing loved ones return home safely
Law enforcement uses K9 scent kits to make sure missing loved ones return home safely

Sheriff’s Offices in DeSoto, Escambia, Charlotte, Nassau, and Putnam Counties, have already begun receiving their first deliveries of the Scent Preservation Kits for distribution. The kits are easy to use and it only takes a few minutes to SWIPE, SEAL, and STORE a person’s unique scent. A person simply SWIPES the included sterile gauze pad repeatedly around the underarm area and places the pad in a specially-treated evidence-grade jar. The jar is then SEALED, labeled, and STORED in a safe place in their home or adult care facility until needed. If a person has wandered or goes missing, a family member or caregiver presents the Scent Kit to emergency responders. This allows responders to begin searching immediately with the best possible scent source. “Typically, the scent is gathered after someone is reported missing from an article of clothing or a personal item. That item is then handled or may have been handled previously by others, contaminating the odor and resulting in a lengthy dismissal process and dramatically decreasing the chance of locating someone who is missing. The Scent Kit eliminates the dismissal process and gives K-9 responders a head start which can save a person’s life,” said Coley. The Scent Kit® can last up to 10 years. The Scent Kits now also contain an Individual Preparedness Plan Flash Drive to store important identification information and trauma-informed information like triggers that can agitate a confused person and comforters that can calm them when they are located. “Having the information prepared in advance gives responders the most accurate identification details when they begin searching,” said Coley.
Scent Kits can be obtained by family members and caregivers by contacting their participating Bringing The Lost Home Project Sheriff’s Office.

Charlotte County Sheriff's Office
Charlotte County Sheriff’s Office

Missing Person Response Protocol and Scent Discriminate K-9 Trailing Training
In addition to utilizing Scent Kits® that increase missing person awareness for at-risk populations, the Bringing The Lost Home Project also includes training to improve agency missing person search response and performance and K-9 Unit trailing capabilities for the participating agencies. Coley, a former FBI Forensic Canine Operations Specialist, will conduct the Missing Person Response Protocol and Human Scent Discriminate K9 Trailing training for each agency.
Coley’s Missing Person Response Protocol is producing successful results for law enforcement responders and search and rescue teams and is endorsed by the Florida State University Emergency Management and Homeland Security Department. The search processes contained in the protocol recently led to the location of an FSU student that had been missing for 3 days in a heavily wooded area.

Escambia County Sheriff's Office
Escambia County Sheriff’s Office

Coley and Scent Evidence K9 will also conduct Human Scent Discriminate K9 Trailing Training for the participating agency K-9 Teams and responders. Coley has developed an effective system of standardized scent discriminate trailing techniques and scent collection methods and technology that are producing higher success rates than traditional K9 tracking practices. “We are seeing over 90% confirmed trail results using our program. It’s making a difference in creating safer communities and saving lives,” said Coley.

Putnam County Sheriff's Office during Bringing The Lost Home Scent Discriminate K9 Training
Putnam County Sheriff’s Office during Bringing The Lost Home Scent Discriminate K9 Training

The first annual Bringing The Lost Home Scent Summit was held in Tallahassee in May 2021 and invited handlers from the participating Sheriff’s Offices. The K9 teams connected with community leaders from the Florida Dept. of Elder Affairs, The Alzheimer’s Project, Tallahassee Memorial Memory Disorder Clinic, and the Hang Tough Foundation and shared their lifesaving K9 search results and best practices with other visiting agencies around Florida in an effort to improve their scent discriminate K9 trailing performance and work together to support the project’s goals of enhancing missing person response capabilities. Click Here to Learn More about the Scent Summit.

DeSoto County Sheriff's Office
DeSoto County Sheriff’s Office

For more information about Scent Evidence K9 and the Bringing The Lost Home Project, visit ScentEvidenceK9.com.
©2021 The Scent Preservation Kit® and all included instructions/checklist materials, M77® Human Scent Discriminate K9 Training Program and 3-Step Missing Person Response Protocol® are registered properties of Scent Evidence K9, LLC