PH 'Lady' Steals Neighbor's Cats and Abandons them in Queens
Subject: PH 'Lady' Steals Neighbor's Cats and Abandons them in Queens
Personally I'd call her a fu#@kin B#@%H!!It’s a catfight! Prospect Heights kitties caught, left in Queens
By Dana Rubinstein
The Brooklyn Paper
A family of cats has sparked a dogfight on a Prospect Heights block, with one woman claiming a neighbor absconded with her outdoor felines and dumped them in a Queens park.
The cat tale begins last fall, when four wobbly legged kittens wandered into Anna Pond’s St. Marks Avenue garden, sticking close to the fence and “peeking their miniature heads†above the grass. Pond and her husband, Paul, were smitten. They named the furballs Inky, Blinky, Mookie and Clyde.
“Inky became a total lover, rolling over each time Paul approached so he could rub his belly,†Pond said.
The Ponds grew so attached to their backyard kitties that they began treating them as if they were their own. They had the cats spayed and neutered. They fed them daily. When the Ponds vacationed, they had a cat-sitter watch over their frisky charges.
“They were our pets,†she said.
But this inter-species idyll soon came to an abrupt end.
In June, the couple noticed that the cats began to disappear one by one. First Clyde, then, a week later, Inky and Blinky were missing, too.
Mookie was left wandering the backyard, “mewing in an unfamiliar way, like she was crying,†said Pond.
The couple confronted its neighbor, who admitted to trapping cats and releasing them in Queens.
The neighbor agreed to speak with The Brooklyn Paper as long as her name was not published. She defended her actions as neighborly.
“When I saw five stray cats living in my backyard … I did extensive research to figure out how I could bring them to be sterilized,†said the neighbor. “All anyone could offer was to come and sterilize the cats. But I would have to first trap the cats and provide a space for them to recover from the surgery. I was not willing to do that. It was too laborious.â€
Meanwhile, the cats were diminishing her quality of life. She said that she found carcasses of dead birds in her garden. Her 5-year-old grandson was afraid to venture into the backyard.
“I personally don’t think cats should be allowed outside to be exposed to cat AIDS, or to get maimed by other cats,†she said. “If I wanted a cat, I would have a cat and I would keep it in my house.â€
The neighbor admits to trapping at least one cat and having a friend deposit it in Queens, possibly in Floral Park.
“I didn’t destroy it,†she said. “I didn’t hurt it. I just wanted to lower the population of cats. I thought I was doing a service to the neighborhood.â€
The Ponds don’t share that view.
“I asked her three times to find out where the cats had been taken, reminding her of my phone number, and three times she said they would call the person who had removed them,†said Pond. “Maybe they did, but they never called us back. Paul still looks at me with a sad face from time to time saying, ‘I miss the kitties. Especially Inky.’â€
The Ponds brought the catnappers’ literature from Slope Street Cats, a local cat-lover organization that neuters and cares for feral cats.
“I said, ‘Thank you for explaining it to me,’†said the neighbor. “‘I will not take any of the cats away anymore, as long as you are respectful of my property and keep the cats confined as much as possible.’â€
Indeed, both Pond and her neighbor agree that there needs to be more public education about alternatives to trapping and displacing cats.
“Public education is the problem,†said the neighbor. “I actually spent a lot of time trying to find alternative solutions and did not come up with anything.â€
Laura Brahm, the executive director of Slope Street Cats, said trapping ferals is actually an ineffective way to get rid of them, because other feral cats will move into the now-empty territory. Brahm also said that Inky, Blinky and Clyde would probably find life in Queens unpleasant at best.
“In all likelihood they [will] starve, get hit by cars, or otherwise meet a nasty end,†she said.
©2007 The Brooklyn Paper
Comments
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if that woman took my cat i'd fucking kill her. at the very least, she'd see more than dead bird carcasses in her year.
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sad sad story. poor kitties and lady.
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she doesn't think cats should be in the dangerous outdoors, so she kidnaps them and leaves them in a strange park???
lying bitch. -
Its the strangest thing I've heard of before. No idea what the lady was thinking. Can't even think about the poor cats that got placed in Queens. Too sad.
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Subject: Trapped feral cats
So why can't they now locate where the cats were dropped and spend some time there trying to recover them?
The woman was wrong to trap and remove cats that she even thought anyone was caring for. She must have observed that couple feeding and talking to the cats. No way she wouldn't have known they were cared for by the neighbors....no way at all.
So now she needs to get her ass on the phone to whomever she had drop the cats off and find out where they were released and canvass that neighborhood.(unless she's really lying and had the cats put to sleep.)
Flyers posted and stopping into shops leaving the phone number of those who took care of the cats originally may lead to their recovery.
I have seen people go above and beyond when a story like this is shared in a neighborhood (the new one in Queens) And you may be surprised by the people who pitch in to help or to even keep and eye out to call the owners if the cats are spotted.
I'll bet the local pet group could lend a hav-a-heart trap to recapture the cats.
But then they need to move them inside cause I would never believe that woman wouldn't do something to the cats if they returned and began going through her back yard again.
Shame on her for dumping them somewhere else. That's like people who dump dogs and cats in the woods somewhere when they don't want them anymore cause they think they can find food on their own.
Idiots......!!! -
I really hope the couple have found out where the cats were dumped and are searching for them. It's not a lost cause yet, I don't think, especially as has been noted if the local community gets involved.
This post upset me so much I actually came out of lurkdom to comment on it. When I was a kid/teen my family had four cats, and one by one they disappeared from our backyard. This was in a very safe suburban neighborhood, where cats are unlikely to get run over or hurt. My family and I just know that those cats were gotten rid of by someone, but we never found out definitively who--the person we thought did it never admitted to doing it.
Now all my family's cats live indoors.
Even without that history, though, I'd be shocked and infuriated by this story. I feel so bad for the Ponds and the cats. I seriously want to kick that woman's ass. Okay deep breaths, no violence....
Ugh. Sickening story.
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