Dog rescued from rubble at St. Lucie County retirement community hit by Hurricane Milton tornado

Dog named Benji found in debris after Hurricane Milton swept through Florida community

ST. LUCIE COUNTY - A dog was rescued Thursday morning from the rubble of a home hit by a tornado spurred by Hurricane Milton at a 55 and older retirement community, with some help from a CBS News Miami crew.

A resident found the shitzu, Lulu, at the Spanish Lakes Country Club Village retirement community near Fort Piece.

CBS News Miami reporter Morgan Rynor was on the scene while appearing live on "CBS Mornings" when the pet was found.

A neighbor who found the dog in the rubble originally confused her with another animal in the retirement community, named Benji who actually was safe with its owners.

"I cannot believe I am starting this right now with some happy news," Rynor said during the morning segment.

"He got Benji. He got Benji. Oh my goodness," Rynor said seconds after the neighbor found the dog.

Lulu had gone missing Wednesday night after tornadoes hit the community. On Thursday, the dog was taken to a veterinarian to be checked out and was treated for skin infections.

A dog was rescued from the rubble of a home hit by a tornado at a 55 and older retirement community spurred by Hurricane Milton.  Morgan Rynor

Two people in the house died, the neighbor told Rynor.

Victor Linero confirmed to CBS News Miami his grandfather, Alejandro Alonso, and the man's girlfriend, Mary Grace Viramontez, were the owners. Linero, who lives in Vero Beach, will become the dog's new owner.

After her report on "CBS Mornings," Rynor said "shortly before our 7:30 a.m. live shot, my photographer Brian (Shanahan), he heard faint barking in the distance and right away our minds went to the worst."

"We said, there's no way that there is a dog in the huge pile of debris behind us," she said.

"Even though we were about about two minutes from our 7:30 live shot, we decided Benji was more important," Rynor said.

"So we ran to the pile of debris," she said. "We started searching and then one of the neighbors came over and the neighbor says he knows Benji."

The neighbor started calling Benji's name and she seems to recognize the voice.

The dog was wrapped in a blanket.

Six people died after two tornadoes spawned from Hurricane Milton touched down at the retirement community.

"This is like nothing other we've seen," Sheriff Keith Pearson told CBS's affiliate WPEC.

He said 12 confirmed high-strength tornadoes tore through the area within 20 minutes.  

More than 100 personnel, including from the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, Florida Highway Patrol, National Guard and state Florida Fish & Wildlife, were on the scene. Some went door-to-door at the community to conduct search and rescue operations.

They called off their search and rescue overnight because of bad weather conditions but resumed the search in the morning.

"Every possible thing we can do is being done to search the area. Check the residences and, if there is anyone inside the residences, we're going to work through the storm to get them out," Pearson said.   

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