Clearly, the people who had originally owned it were not too concerned about it.
They thought a coyote had gotten it!
Why didn't they put out flyers for it?
They did put up flyers, web sites, etc.
Brush up on your seventh grade reading comprehension.
Meanwhile, just three doors down in September of 2013, Milone filed a police report, contacted her microchip manufacturer PetKey and posted a hundred or so of these fliers all over town at animal shelters, the police station, even local grocery stores looking for her indoor/outdoor cat Joey.
Clear case of cat kidnapping it sounds like to me.
Meanwhile, just three doors down in September of 2013, Milone filed a police report, contacted her microchip manufacturer PetKey and posted a hundred or so of these fliers all over town at animal shelters, the police station, even local grocery stores looking for her indoor/outdoor cat Joey.
Have you ever seen a loose cat starve? I haven’t.
According to the bird people they are great killing machines fully capable of exterminating all North American songbirds.
How could they starve in a land full of doves and pigeons and sparrows and starlings and rats and mice?
It’s like those people who call the fire department to “rescue” cats in trees. When’s the last time you ever saw a cat skeleton stuck in a tree? As many 9/11 calls as there are the trees should be festooned with feline vertebrae dangling thick as Christmas tinsel.
As the article, had you read it, clearly states,
"in September of 2013, Milone filed a police report, contacted her microchip manufacturer PetKey and posted a hundred or so of these fliers all over town at animal shelters, the police station, even local grocery stores looking for her indoor/outdoor cat Joey."