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Larry Bailey sits next to daughter Brenda LaFlamme, right, after they were reunited after 16 years. With them are Red Cross volunteer Debbie Kemp and Johnny Sontag.
Larry Bailey sits next to daughter Brenda LaFlamme, right, after they were reunited after 16 years. With them are Red Cross volunteer Debbie Kemp and Johnny Sontag.
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NEW ORLEANS — When a Florida man saw a news photo of a man rescued from Hurricane Isaac’s floodwaters, he was sure it was his brother. It wasn’t — but the mistaken identity started a search that ultimately reunited that homeless man with the two daughters he hadn’t seen in 16 years.

The saga began Aug. 30, when The Associated Press published a photograph of the soaked, bearded man being helped by two rescuers in Slidell, La., after he nearly drowned, swept away in waist-deep water. He has since been identified as 60-year-old Larry Bailey, but his identity was then unknown.

Marcus Michels of West Melbourne, Fla., called AP’s New Orleans bureau Aug. 31, certain the man was his brother Mitchell Lee Massey, who has been missing for six years.

AP reached out to the Louisiana Red Cross, where a spokeswoman examined the photo to figure out where the rescuers were based — and the nearest shelter in Slidell.

Debbie Kemp, a Red Cross volunteer with Safe and Well, a disaster program that helps find people with medical or mental-health problems, took up the search. Kemp, of Ann Arbor, Mich., called the number Bailey had given at the shelter and reached Johnny Sontag of Slidell, who gives Bailey food for doing yard work and lets Bailey stay in a trailer he owns.

“He’s my buddy, so I always try and look out for him,” said Sontag, who has known Bailey for seven or eight years. He described Bailey as a wonderful man who often talked about his family.

However, like so many other times, Bailey wasn’t at the trailer. Sontag said he disappeared so often that he had a neighbor call him whenever Bailey returned.

Days later, Sontag found him, but Bailey took off again. Someone — Sontag doesn’t know who — brought Bailey back to the trailer, incoherent and bleeding from a badly infected head injury. He was so weak that Sontag said he had to bathe him.

Sontag didn’t know where to turn. He couldn’t afford medicine. He called Kemp, who told him to take Bailey to an emergency room. Doctors said Bailey would have been dead in a month without medical care, Sontag said.

As Bailey recovered, he and Kemp called Michels from the hospital, and it became clear the two men weren’t related. However, the search for Bailey’s family continued.

As he regained his strength, Bailey was able to recall the names of relatives and where they lived. Kemp reached his ex-wife, who told her daughters their father had been found.

Bailey had struggled for decades with bipolar disorder and substance abuse, said his 38-year-old daughter, Heather Atkinson of Bradenton, Fla. She said her father had built a successful yard business and a house but lost both to the alcoholism that made her and her sister stop seeing him.

Atkinson’s oldest daughter was a year old when she broke off visits. “He was drinking, and I couldn’t have my daughter around that,” she said.

When she learned he had been found, “I thought maybe when he got out of the hospital we could get him into an addiction program,” said Atkinson, whose three daughters are now teenagers.

Bailey’s other daughter, Brenda LaFlamme of the Orlando, Fla., area, came to Slidell on Sept. 11, the day Bailey was released from the hospital. She signed Bailey into a nursing home.

Atkinson said her father told her his skull had been fractured when he was beaten by two men in New Orleans about a month before the flood. He had been treated in an emergency room but not since, and the injury got infected, she said.

Atkinson said she calls Bailey daily and that he has shown improvement. “All of a sudden, he was totally lucid,” she said. “He said, ‘It’s so good to hear from you.’ He said, ‘I love you.’ “

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