Stolen dog turns up in Wyoming after police make routine traffic stop - Action News
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Ottawa

Stolen dog turns up in Wyoming after police make routine traffic stop

Alaina Trippnever expected to see her dog Teddy again after he was stolen from her Ottawa apartment last fall. So when the white miniature poodle showed up, dirty but unhurt, in a police stop in Wyoming ten months later, it felt like a small miracle.

Alaina Tripp's dog Teddy was taken last October from her Centretown apartment

A woman holds a cellphone showing a photo of a white poodle.
Alaina Tripp holds a recent photo of Teddy on her phone. The Paws for Life animal shelter in Riverton, Wyo., is currently housing the white poodle. (Rebecca Zandbergen/CBC)

Alaina Trippnever expected to see her dog Teddy again after he was stolen from her Ottawa apartment last fall.

So when the white miniature poodle showed up, dirty but unhurt, in a police stop in Wyoming 10months later, it felt like a small miracle.

"I am so, so happy," said the 33-year-old. "I really never ever thought and nobody ever thought,not the police,not my friends, family ... [that] I would ever, ever see this dog again."

Tripp said she returned home last Septemberto find someone had broken into her Centretown apartment and taken the four-month old puppy fromhis crate. Trippsaid she believes the thief targeted Teddy.

"He was just a wiry little, hadn't-poodled-out, fluffy puppy-coat,tan-haired thing," said Tripp, who works as a grocery store cashier.

"He was pretty scruffy. Hewas living in a car. It waspretty wild because he'dbeen cooped up in the car so long.- Don Nethicumara, Riverton police

Tripp had just gotten Teddy after her previous dog got sick and had to be put down.

"It ripped my life apart completely," she said.

Trippsaid she contacted local police and also the nearby Cornerstone Women's Shelter, which turned out tohave video of someonebreaking into her apartment.

"They shared the footage with the Ottawa police and we discovered who had taken him. We just hadn't been able to track him down," she said.

A white poodle sits on the ground with a leash around his neck.
Teddy at four months, before he was taken. (Submitted by Alaina Tripp)

Late last month, purely by chance, police in the small central Wyomingtown of Rivertonfound both the suspect and a much bigger and dirtier Teddy.

After Officer Don Nethicumara pulled over a driver for running a red light,henoticed the warrant out for the man's arrest.

Ottawa police toldCBC News the man had been wanted in connection witha residential break-and-enter and aninvestigation is ongoing.


"Somewhere in the bottom, [the warrant]mentioned that he was in possession of a stolen dog named Teddy," said Nethicumara.

The officerconfiscated the dog andthe suspect was eventually arrested on possession and theft charges.CBC News confirmed the man pleaded not guilty in Riverton court on Monday and is currently in custody.

"[Teddy]was pretty scruffy. Hewas living in a car," said Nethicumara."It waspretty wild because he'dbeen cooped up in the car so long. When I brought him over to the police department, he just ran wild.

"He's a really nice dog.He was playing catch with himself. That was probably the first freedom he's had in months."

Staff at the Paws for Life animal shelter in Riverton arenow caring for Teddy.

Nethicumaratracked Tripp down online.

"I did a quick Google search with the name 'Teddy,''stolen' and 'Ottawa,' and it actuallyled me to a Reddit post," he said. "Itactually led me to the Facebook page.... Someone had posted Alaina's phone number. We confirmed that it was Teddy and that she did want him back."

Two officers pose with a white poodle.
Don Nethicumara, an officer with the Riverton Police Department in Riverton, Wyo., and Animal Control Officer Shannon Sanderson pose with Teddy after he was recovered from the suspect. (Submitted by Don Nethicumara)

But getting Teddy back home is proving to be a challenge.

"TheRiverton Police Department is working with animal rescues here and back and forth, and we're trying to figure out how to get him home," said Tripp.

Travelling across the border with a dog requires the proper paperwork, whichis likely to be expensivefor Tripp. Andgoing down to fetch the dog in personis out of the question because Trippdoesn't currently have a passport.

"We seem to be hitting a lot of roadblocks and red tape," she said.

A woman wearing an orange vest stares into the camera
'Now it feels like I'm going to lose [Teddy] again because I can't get him over the border,' says Alaina Tripp. (Rebecca Zandbergen/CBC)

"The last couple of days, I've been kind of sad because I'm like, I found this dog and now it feels like I'm going to lose him again because I can't get him over the border."

Nethicumara, who owns three rescue dogs of his own (a Schnauzer-poodle named Darth Vader, a Chihuahua-cross named Tinkerbelland a mixed breed named Ariel), said he understands Tripp's frustration.

"If someone took my dog away from me, I won't stop at anything to get my dog back," he said. "One way or another, Teddy's going to get back to Alaina."