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Supercalifungilisticexpialidocious (F_U_N_G_U_S)
05-16-2002, 10:36 PM
Canadian Press <BR>May 13, 2002 04:50:00 <BR> <BR>DARTMOUTH, Canada - A frenzied feline that sent people scurrying from their home during a bloody weekend rampage is under observation, not destroyed as previously reported. <BR> <BR> <BR>Sandra MacDonald, manager of the Metro Animal Emergency Clinic, said the cat will be held for observation until the end of the week. <BR>“We’re just going to hold her for a few days to make sure that’s exactly what they want to do,” MacDonald said Monday. <BR> <BR>The cat’s veterinarian told the clinic the cat has “a history of aggression” that includes biting and scratching. <BR> <BR>On Tuesday, Cocoa Puff was still riled in her cage. <BR> <BR>“If you look at her she’s sort of hissing and spitting at you,” MacDonald said. <BR> <BR>Robert and Laurel Mancini were upstairs in their two-story home when Sherry Higgs, their 14-year-old babysitter, arrived at 3 p.m. Sunday to take care of their two children. <BR> <BR> <BR>Higgs had just finished admiring the family's new kitten, Kahlua, when Cocoa Puff, an adult siamese, came around the corner and started clawing the girl's legs. <BR> <BR>"The cat just snapped," said Robert Mancini. <BR> <BR>Cocoa Puff was not the kitten's mother, but the pair had bonded and the older female was even nursing the 12-week-old male. <BR> <BR>"I think she felt she was protecting the kitten," said Laurel Mancini, who ran downstairs to find her children and their babysitter under attack. <BR> <BR>"The cat was puffed out like a porcupine," she said. <BR> <BR>The three youngsters ran upstairs, but Higgs didn't make it. <BR> <BR>"The cat caught her at the top of the staircase and began to attack her again," Robert Mancini said. <BR> <BR>"So I grabbed a pair of jeans and I pinned the cat to the floor. The cat rolled over and then bit through the jeans into my thumb," he said. <BR> <BR>"I had to release the cat. The cat then attacked the babysitter again, over and over." <BR> <BR>Mancini managed to knock the cat over the stairs and they all hid in upstairs bedrooms. He tried calling the city's animal control officers, but they refused to help. <BR> <BR>"We fled the house," he said. "We all ran for our lives." <BR> <BR>Robert Mancini took the kids to see a doctor while his wife went to work. When they returned home a few hours later, Cocoa Puff seemed calm. But at 6 p.m., the cat went ballistic again. <BR> <BR>"It let out a vicious scream and lunged at me," Robert Mancini said. "It came downstairs with one intention, and that was to harm us." <BR> <BR>He tried dragging the cat outside on his leg while the animal gnawed and clawed him. <BR> <BR>But when Cocoa Puff saw the door closing with her and Mancini outside, she bolted back inside. That left the concerned father locked outside with no key and his children held prisoner by the cat. <BR> <BR>One child climbed on top of the kitchen table, but Cocoa Puff jumped up and started mauling her again. The girl eventually fled upstairs, but paid a bloody price. Her legs are covered with deep gouges and bruises. <BR> <BR>A neighbor heard her screams and called police. <BR> <BR>Four cops eventually got the door open, cornered the cat and pushed her in a cage. But they turned over a couch, a bed and a coffee table in the process. <BR> <BR>"The kitchen was destroyed," said Robert Mancini, who took the cat to the vet and had it destroyed. <BR> <BR>He said the animal didn't usually like outsiders, but had never attacked anyone. <BR> <BR>"She never in our four years hurt anybody or threatened anybody. When strangers came in she would run away. But she was very loving to us."

Will Finch (Shetan)
05-16-2002, 11:27 PM
No problem.....shfeeeet. ;-)

Sheri Gordon (Sheri)
05-16-2002, 11:29 PM
Sounds like a good base for a new movie. ;-)

Supercalifungilisticexpialidocious (F_U_N_G_U_S)
05-17-2002, 12:38 AM
Four Legged Critters

Angillas (Angillas)
05-17-2002, 07:37 AM
Nice kitty. I think I'll adopt. <IMG SRC="http://www.electric-ent.com/bbs/clipart/happy.gif" ALT=":)"> <BR> <BR>(Should have been easier to apprehend a 10 pound animal, though)

Sheri Gordon (Sheri)
05-17-2002, 08:07 AM
Yeah, , just lure it in with some milk or tuna, and voila! <IMG SRC="http://www.electric-ent.com/bbs/clipart/happy.gif" ALT=":)"> <BR> <BR>Speaking of annoying tunes that stick in yer head all day..... <BR> <BR>"We are Siameeese, if you pleeeeease...." <BR> <BR>;-)

Supercalifungilisticexpialidocious (F_U_N_G_U_S)
05-17-2002, 03:22 PM
Tuna. Not milk. Most adult cats become lactose intolerant :] Plus, tuna has a much stronger odor. But read the article, the cat was mauling people in the kitchen. They probably couldn't GET to the kitchen w/o great bodily risk.

Angillas (Angillas)
05-17-2002, 04:07 PM
Reminds me of the Sluggy Freelance story "Kitten"

Sheri Gordon (Sheri)
05-17-2002, 05:04 PM
Every cat I've had couldn't resist milk. <IMG SRC="http://www.electric-ent.com/bbs/clipart/happy.gif" ALT=":)"> Besides, I was thinking more in line of the Disney clip from Lady and the Tramp. "Where there are baby, there are milk nearby!" <BR> <BR>;-)

Supercalifungilisticexpialidocious (F_U_N_G_U_S)
05-17-2002, 09:13 PM
Actually, since she was nursing the kitten herself, she might have been more inclined to stay away from drinking any milk, thinking she was taking away from the kitten.

Will Finch (Shetan)
05-18-2002, 07:37 AM
It's too bad she was destroyed. Cocoa Puff could have been a mean movie cat, and might not have required much training. She probably was nursing that kitten, and I don't know many cats that take kindly to being interrupted while nursing. Of all creatures, cats seem to be unpredictable at times. "Fracture" jumped me one time. She (got stepped on by a horse, walked with a limp from then on) was a cute stray grey cat who took up residence in the hay loft. Eventually, she had 4 snow white kittens. (Unknown Papa cat) She, being half wild, would just sort of tolerate humans. I had decided to pet the kittens one day, and didn't see fracture around. All of a sudden, she came sailing off from on top of the hay bales, and landed squarely on my back, leaving her claw marks one on each shoulder and each side of my lower back. I realized what probably goes through a horse's mind if you get on its back without proper ground training. I forgave her (after a few choice words, I'm sure) realizing she was only doing what nature instilled in her. <BR> <BR> This is the sad part: about a month or so later I had gone up to check on the kittens and found fracture looking wild-eyed. The kittens were nowhere to be found,but tufts of their fur was scattered all over. I'm fairly certain it was a large owl that I'd seen flying at night, or maybe a weasel?? don't really know, but I guess whatever it was, did what it needed to do to survive.