View Lost Dogs Near Glendale, AZ

Motty is Missing in Glendale, AZ

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Status

LOST

Date Last Seen

March 5, 2026

Location Last Seen

Glendale, AZ 85306

Nearest Landmark

67th Ave and Mary Jane lane

Name

Motty

Sex

Female

PawBoost ID

72647153

Species

Dog

Description

Her name is Motty she has cancer and goes to the vet once a month. She is chipped, she is 12 years old

Message from Owner

Please contact right away if found or seen thank you

Facebook Community Response

Jeana R.
2 months ago
Mike Lite ever found?
Reply
Lex H.
3 months ago
The psychology behind FINDERS KEEPERS: PROFILE 1: THE "KEEPSIE" — Casual Keeper (Finder-Keeper) btw it's a #felony to steal a pet which this becomes if they do not look for the owner. Psychology: These are people who convince themselves they’re doing the right thing by keeping a found pet. They're not necessarily bad people, but they are: Emotionally impulsive (“I love this dog!”) Self-justifying (“It looks better with me than on the street.”) Avoidant of conflict or guilt (“If I don’t tell anyone, I don’t have to deal with it.”) Often believe “finders keepers” or that they’re a “better” owner They may even rationalize that they “rescued” your pet — especially if your dog looked scared, dirty, or was outside alone. Motivations: Emotional attachment: “My kids love this dog now.” Hero syndrome: “I saved it.” Avoiding hassle: “I don’t want to get involved with animal control.” Fear of losing something they now like. The longer they have it the more attached they become. It's theirs now. If no one knows mindset... *These are the same people that will pull down your flyers in certain areas. PAY ATTENTION TO THAT! FOCUS HEAVILY IN THAT AREA. What Messaging Works on Them: I have found many in Arizona don't realize when you find a pet you are required to look for the owners for approximately 5 days I have also found people are unaware #felony and Arizona to STEAL A PET! There's a large part of the population that think finding and keeping a pet is okay. Best tactics: “No questions asked” reward Make it easy Use language that removes blame: “We’re just so grateful to get our dog back. No judgment. No questions. Just thankful.” Don’t: Threaten legal action or talk about “stealing” Say “you have my dog!” on social media (makes them defensive) Use guilt trips — it backfires
Reply
Lex H.
3 months ago
It's very important to act quickly! Hi there are some very important things that owners do / don't do that make or break them finding their pet oftentimes. 1. Absolutely put the major intersection and city in the first sentence of your post something like Missing from... 2. Depending on your area if it's high risk for coyotes or pet theft put a reward in the second sentence with the amount. Nobody pays attention to the word reward only. The reward is to inspire people that don't really care about a lost dog to pay attention to or to motivate people to pay a little more attention and go the extra mile to help you get your dog back. 3. The first place owners should post is on Nextdoor and then the neighbors by ring app. These are like a mini Amber alert that go out to your immediate vicinity. Considering most dogs are within a mile of home if the owner acts quickly that reaches many people in your immediate radius. Next door reaches 2- 4 MI Neighbors by ring reaches approximately 8 miles around you North South East and west. 4. Also extremely vital! Never just post and move on! Sometimes when owners do this their post dies. Zero comments. Crickets. You don't want that. Comment on your post a few times after it goes live to kick it off stir the pot what have you so that other people start getting notifications and come and see what all the to do is about. Be sure to like their comments. You don't have to respond with a comment to all of them but it's very important to engage with people in the comment section. 5. Do not put your phone number on your post or in the comments on neighbors by ring if you can help it. The scammers will call you like crazy. Babysit your comments heavily. Every 15 to 20 minutes I would be checking and commenting. 6. Write your own ad do not go with what neighbors by ring offers as a generic one. Don't use a pet poster for your pets picture put an actual big picture of your pet so people can clearly see it when they scroll by. If you act quickly on these apps the first day there's a good chance you get your dog back in a couple hours or less. If you run to Paw boost, the shelter, and all the Facebook groups you are losing time you don't have. Focus on the apps for the first day or two. 9 out of 10 people that find a pet usually put them on one of the two apps. This is because they're already on them for other things. They're not on Lost pet websites they're not on last pet groups. I hope this helps. ~Found dogs only Maricopa County♥️ Volunteers feel free to copy and paste.
Reply
Daniel G.
3 months ago
Esme David https://24Petconnect.com/DetailsMain/AZHS3/A841844
Reply
Esme D.
3 months ago
Mike Lite check the Humane Society ID A841844-found 67th Ave and Greenway. I texted you the info at the number on your flyer.
Reply
AZ T.
3 months ago
Search with flashlights, a squeaky toy, and a box of treats or food to shake. (Don't make him cross a busy street if you see him.) Search every 1-2 hours. Look under vehicles, in garages, bushes, storm drains, alleys. Check online on Nextdoor, Ring Neighbors, Ring Rescue, Petco Love Lost, the Humane Society, and the pound. Make flyers to post everywhere.
Reply
Mike L.
3 months ago
She was lost in peoria on 67th and Mary Jane lane
Reply

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