FIRST ON FOX: Dog the Bounty Hunter arrived at Brian Laundrie’s parents’ home Saturday, knocked on the door and met silence, but he’s already picked up a scent.

"The reason I went to Mr. [Christopher] Laundrie is I carry a reputation with me," he told Fox News Digital moments later. "The reputation is, ‘He gives you a second chance. He’s gonna get you, but he gives you a second chance.’"

The reality TV star and legendary bounty hunter, whose real name is Duane Chapman, is a father of 13 who lost a daughter around the same age as Gabby Petito in a car accident in 2006. He was already in Florida on a honeymoon with his wife Francie Chapman, he said, when people began reaching out to him to look into Laundrie’s disappearance.

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"I know what the victims feel like," he said.

Petito’s parents and stepparents spent Saturday preparing for a planned funeral for their daughter Sunday, a week after her remains were discovered at a campsite she shared with Laundrie in late August.

Dog the Bounty Hunter is in North Port, Florida, to assist the search for Brian Laundrie. (Matt Leach/Fox News)

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Laundrie’s parents reported him missing Friday, Sept. 17, telling police they hadn’t seen him in three days.

"And the dad can still reach out to me, through social media," Chapman said. "Let’s get the kid captured alive. Alive."

On Sept. 19, an FBI-led search discovered the remains of Laundrie’s fiancée, Petito, at the Spread Creek dispersed camping area north of Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

Laundrie was named a person of interest in her disappearance and is the subject of a federal indictment for alleged debit card fraud, prompting a warrant that Chapman carried with him Saturday.

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"We had a lot of requests that I get in on this," Chapman said. "This is what I do for a living, for 45 years."

With a search underway at a swampy reserve near Laundrie’s home, many outside experts say they don’t believe he could survive there.

Surviving in the swamp would be difficult enough, Chapman said, and thermal vision devices used by law enforcement make eluding capture even harder. 

Chapman, who has his own anonymous tip line (833-TELL-DOG), said he’s getting calls every two or three minutes. His wife, Francie Chapman, stood a few feet away fielding a steady stream of calls.

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Much of the information he’s received points toward the Appalachian Trail, where Laundrie camped previously. So if he’s not in the Carlton Reserve, as many suspect, Laundrie may be along the trail.

"If there’s anywhere out there that looks the hottest, that could be the area," Chapman said.

If Laundrie skipped town, investigators must figure out where he went and begin their search with dogs, infrared and other technology, Chapman said.

"I think he’s young enough, not an experienced criminal, but what is his greatest experience? Outdoorsman. — that’s what he does the best," Chapman said. "I don’t think he can shoplift, live on the run, live in cheap hotels. On a one-to-10 he’s probably a six, compared to the outdoorsmen and some of the guys I’ve captured."

So, Chapman’s hunch is Laundrie is on the trail. 

"What’s in his blood is in them hills," Chapman added. 

And Chapman is no stranger to the Appalachian Trail himself. He took part in a massive manhunt in upstate New York in 2015 for two escaped murderers.

And if Laundrie does turn out to be in the swamp, he would have to be moving by night when authorities suspend their search and trying to hide by day.

Chapman agrees with other experts that Laundrie’s probably not in Mexico.

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"A White boy that doesn’t know Spanish, the cartel’s gonna grab him for the reward," he said. "So he’s not down there."

So he’s likely in the states and probably somewhere along the East Coast, according to Chapman.

"Somebody else knows where he’s at, where they dropped him off at, or did they drop him off?" Chapman said. "That person is gonna tell us because, again, we're not the police. This is anonymous."