PHOENIX — Lindsay Deyo has been trekking through north Phoenix on foot for months on a mission to locate her beloved service dog, Mya, a female American Bully she said was stolen by an unknown man during a park visit.

The 35-year-old Deyo quit a part-time waitressing job to dedicate herself to the search, posting missing dog signs across the area even as she wards off the seizures Mya would warn her of.

“I just feel like, not myself without her,” Deyo said of the broken bond between her and Mya, whom she adopted as a seven-week pup at the onset of the pandemic. “She’s my best friend.”

What happened to Mya?

Woman and canine were abruptly separated in the morning of Nov. 9 at a Phoenix apartment complex’s dog park. Deyo momentarily turned her sight away from Mya while at the enclosed green space. Once she looked back, her four-legged companion had vanished.  

Calling out the dog’s name, Deyo scoured the apartment looking for Mya. Tears streamed down Deyo’s face while heavy rainfall rolled through the area as she realized Mya was taken.

“I was crying all day long,” Deyo said. “It was horrible.”

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Helping get Mya back home

Deyo thinks she managed to yield a description on the dognapper after speaking with two people at the apartments.    

Mya appears to have been stolen by someone witnesses described as a Black man of medium complexion in his 20s, around 6-foot-1 and 180 pounds, with tattooed arms and sporting a faded haircut, a red shirt and jeans.

One person even told Deyo this man had Mya on a leash and boasted about paying thousands of dollars to purchase her.