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Rescued cats need assistance
17/03/2008 13:46 - (SA)
Pittsburgh - Animal rescue workers were seeking donations of animal carriers and other supplies to help hundreds of cats rescued from a facility where they had been living in squalid conditions.
Officials discovered 600 to 700 cats - many sick and dying - during a raid on Thursday at the secluded 11.74-hectare property known as Tiger Ranch.
Thousands more are believed to be buried at the site in Tarentum, Pennsylvania, about 32km northwest of Pittsburgh.
Some 406 "very sick" cats were being treated on Sunday at a temporary animal hospital, said Howard Nelson, director of the Philadelphia-based Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, which organised the raid.
Fifty cats have died since the raid, either because they had to be euthanised or from their illnesses, he said.
Hidden camera recorded conditions
Fifteen were euthanised at the scene and 105 dead cats were found in freezers, Nelson said.
Roughly 100 cats remain on the property and have not yet been captured, he said.
The sanctuary's owner, Linda Bruno, also known as Linn Marie, 45, was arraigned on Friday on 13 counts of animal cruelty and neglect.
She was being held at a county jail. It was not immediately known if she had a lawyer.
The raid followed a seven-month investigation in which a former humane officer used a hidden camera to record conditions at the facility, where she volunteered.
In a statement, the PSPCA requested donations of newspaper and pet carriers - including rabbit-size carriers and medium-size dog crates - for housing the surviving cats.
It asked that donations be dropped off at the Clarion County Humane Society in Shippenville, Pennsylvania.
Cats end up in gas chambers
Investigators said the cats were living in filthy conditions in multiple buildings, including one crammed with scores of cats huddled around a portable heater with no clean water and a single food bowl.
Animal-rescue groups from several states often turned to the Tiger Ranch, which promised lifetime care for unwanted cats that likely would have been euthanised in overcrowded shelters.
As news of the raid spread, horrified rescue groups flooded the SPCA with e-mails and posted frantic notes on internet message boards wondering what had happened to their animals and how to get them back.
"Many, many cats from Georgia went to Tiger Ranch," said Pat Dasenbrock, who works with cat-rescue groups in Atlanta. "A driver took cats by the van load - 50 or 60 of them there - twice a month."
They travelled the 1 126km to Pittsburgh because many adoptable shelter cats in Georgia end up in gas chambers, generally regarded as an inhumane method of euthanising animals, she said.
"We felt so good about Linda," she said. "She told us she adopted 100 cats a weekend and that there was a long list of people waiting to adopt cats up there."
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