Just in case anyone has ever worked with or sent a cat to Tiger Ranch in PA.
Looks like they're looking for any individuals or groups who may have
brought cats there.


  


 
<http://www.emailthis.clickability.com/et/emailThis?clickMap=viewThis&etMail
ToID=1831313090> SPCA tries saving Pa. shelter's cats | Philadelphia
Inquirer | 03/15/2008* 


 

 

 


 

 


SPCA tries saving Pa. shelter's cats


By Amy Worden 

INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

>From New York to Indiana to Georgia, desperate animal-rescue groups
regularly turned to the Tiger Ranch Cat Sanctuary near Pittsburgh and its
promise of lifetime care for unwanted cats that likely would have been
euthanized in overcrowded shelters.

In the last year, thousands of cats, some feral, many others once family
pets, have been shipped hundreds of miles to what their rescuers thought was
a safe haven.

But the reality, revealed in a nighttime raid led by the Philadelphia-based
Pennsylvania SPCA last week, was anything but safe.

A 120-member team of shelter workers, police, veterinarians and volunteers
descended on the property, 20 miles northeast of Pittsburgh, on Thursday
night after a seven-month undercover investigation and found hundreds of
sick and dying cats, 105 cat carcasses in freezers, and a fresh burial pit.

"What struck me was how young the cats were," Howard Nelson, chief executive
officer of the Pennsylvania SPCA said yesterday after witnessing several
autopsies. "They did not die natural deaths. They were coming in healthy,
were exposed to horrific viruses, and died a horrific death."

Conditions were deplorable in a house and five outbuildings, crammed with
scores of cats huddled around a portable heater with no clean water and a
single food bowl, humane officials said.

Over the next 48 hours, about 400 cats, almost all suffering from
life-threatening disease, were seized in what SPCA officials said might have
been the state's largest anti-cruelty raid ever. Agents yesterday were
trying to round up 250 to 300 cats still roaming the 29-acre property.

The sanctuary's owner, Linda Bruno, 46, also known as Lin Marie, was
arrested and charged with 14 counts of animal cruelty. She was held in an
Allegheny County jail after being unable to post the $50,000 bond. More
cruelty charges are pending, authorities said.

Word of the raid spread quickly throughout the Mid-Atlantic and South as
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 traveled the 700 miles to Pittsburgh because Georgia has a serious cat
overpopulation problem, and many adoptable shelter cats end up in gas
chambers, generally regarded as an inhumane method of euthanizing animals,
Dasenbrock 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."

Rose Rosenbaum of Hillsborough, N.J., said she had taken eight rescued cats
to Tiger Ranch last year and found a line of others waiting to surrender
cats. She said she had seen a few cats with runny noses but thought the
facility looked fine.

"We were surprisingly happy with what we saw," she said. "I wonder if it
just got out of hand."

Bruno charged between $1 and $25 for every cat she took in, according to
those who did business with her. There has not yet been a full accounting of
her business.

Nelson said the public had not seen the worst sites on the property: the
burial pits out back and an area an investigator called "the death room,"
where cats with untreated diseases languished, too weak to reach their food
or water bowls.

Debi Romano, founder of the SaveKitty Foundation in New York, said she had
sent 18 cats plucked from the streets to Tiger Ranch last year after talking
to Bruno and hearing from fellow cat rescuers and from officials in
shelter's community that cats were well cared for.

"I trusted their judgment," she said. "I live and breathe for my feral cats.
I thought I was sending them to a better life."

The surviving cats are in an emergency medical center set up at the former
Clarion County Humane Society about two hours away, where they are being
treated for life-threatening conditions including respiratory infections,
abscesses, dehydration and malnutrition. Between 30 and 35 cats have been
euthanized, Nelson said.

With no records, an unknown number of cats that could be tracked via
implanted microchips, and rescue groups scattered around the East, the SPCA
faces a post-Hurricane Katrina-like effort to reunite cats with those who
tried to save them.

Until they are surrendered by Bruno or she is convicted, the cats will have
to remain at the Clarion County facility.

Contact staff writer Amy Worden at 717-783-2584 or
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [EMAIL PROTECTED] at phillynews.com 

 

  

<<attachment: ~WRD000.jpg>>

Reply via email to