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Elderly cat trappers avoid trial in eastern Oregon town
Oregonlive ^ | Monday December 22, 2008, 7:12 AM | by The Associated Press

Posted on 12/23/2008 9:54:37 PM PST by MovementConservative

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To: Fawn

What do you mean? I am the police!!! But dont despair, we dont waste them, they are given to the Oriental Restaurant.


41 posted on 12/24/2008 5:54:20 AM PST by Concho (Bitterly Clinging to Guns and Religion)
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To: Concho

Then report yourself...we need to get cops like that off the street.


42 posted on 12/24/2008 5:55:54 AM PST by Fawn (I want my bailout too!!!!)
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To: PERKY2004


43 posted on 12/24/2008 6:26:25 AM PST by whd23
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To: Secret Agent Man

Laws are different in different places. When I bought a house, I made sure the local laws allowed cats to roam free. As long as they’re fixed, rabies-shotted, and wear a bell to alert birds, they don’t do anyone any harm. They don’t gather into violent packs the way dogs do, and they don’t poop in the middle of sidewalks. They’re much happier, and much better behaved when indoors, if they’re allowed to come and go as they please (this means having a cat door, not letting them out a people door and then leaving them stuck outside when they may want food and shelter).


44 posted on 12/24/2008 6:26:50 AM PST by GovernmentShrinker
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To: Electric Graffiti

Cats that are allowed to go outside don’t behave that way inside. And if they’re fixed, as they always should be, they rarely spray (and a little daily pill will stop the few who do) and you can barely smell their pee anyway. Unfixed male cats are pretty awful, but then again the sort of people who would keep an unfixed male cat in the house and let it spray all over the place, and who don’t keep the litter box clean and thus drive the cat to relieve itself all over the house, are the sort of people who are likely to do a lot interior destruction themselves (and allow their children to do the same, if they have children).

I’m renovating an apartment right now to use as a rental, and will allow pets. I’m having Tyvek put under the new carpeting/padding. It’s an old Victorian house with the original hardwood floors in good condition, and I’m making sure they stay that way, even if some renter’s incontinent old St. Bernard pees a gallon a day on the carpet. And I’m putting in a pet door and fencing the yard.


45 posted on 12/24/2008 6:37:55 AM PST by GovernmentShrinker
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To: MovementConservative

What dummies.

A 220 Conibear trap in front of a hole in a cardboard box that contains something stinky in it and the fate of spook would have never been known.


46 posted on 12/24/2008 6:50:18 AM PST by Malsua
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To: MovementConservative

Schmeckel the Terrible is not amused.

47 posted on 12/24/2008 7:37:31 AM PST by pabianice
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To: djf

Wow are you in for it when the cats take over!!!!


48 posted on 12/24/2008 7:40:26 AM PST by mad_as_he$$ (Nemo me impune lacessit.)
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To: djf
A rule to live by: hit it, don't swerve.

Whatever jumps out in front of your car will do less damage than whatever it is you hit when you swerve. Cats, dogs, many deer weigh less than 100 pounds. A tree or another car weighs a lot more.

49 posted on 12/24/2008 7:57:38 AM PST by stillonaroll (Nominate a non-RINO in 2012!)
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To: Kirkwood

Last summer our neighbors called animal control about stray cats in our neighborhood. We had a bunch of them, constantly breeding more. Animal control told them to trap some and they would come pick them up. One night they caught a raccoon. When animal control came they were going to charge the couple with illegally trapping a raccoon. Our neighbor asked the animal control officer how he would suggest they tell the raccoons not to come into the trap. He said he didn’t know if they could read and more importantly he wasn’t surte they knew English and he sure didn’t know any Raccoon language. The officer wasn’t amused, but he didn’t give them a summons, guess even he realized how stupid the suggestion was.


50 posted on 12/24/2008 8:03:55 AM PST by kalee
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To: stillonaroll
If you hit a deer it can go through the windshield and kill you.

51 posted on 12/24/2008 8:17:33 AM PST by Kirkwood
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To: GovernmentShrinker

Outdoor cats do a lot of damage to gardens around here. They also kill protected species of birds. That is why there is a local ordinance here. Let your untagged kitty roam and it will go to the pound and eventually will be destroyed. Tagged kitties that get picked up will mean you pay a fine to get it back. If you love your pet cat you will never let it roam becsuse it could be killed by dogs or other cats or it could get hit by a car.


52 posted on 12/24/2008 8:23:38 AM PST by Kirkwood
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To: Fawn
The laws do not apply to cats because cats are not like dogs.

Actually in my jurisdiction cats are specifically mentioned as being exactly like dogs as far as the law is concerned.

My local Animal Control office actually TELLS us to trap the feral and stray cats and bring them in. I do this regularly.

If the cats are chipped the owners are notified and given a chance to claim their animal after paying a fine. (50 dollars the first time, 100 the second, 250 the third, plus a daily boarding fee.)

If they're not chipped and are deemed adoptable they are put up. If they're deemed unadoptable they're humanely put down.

I'm going through this right now. Someone actually went to the trouble to chip a feral, and then moved out of the neighborhood.

I've seen the animal using my flower beds as a litter box. Unsurprisingly both my dogs have been infected with worms.

So I trapped the animal in question and took it to Animal Control after paying, out of my own pocket, for a worm check.

Sure enough, the animal is infected with the same worms as my dogs.

Fortunately the chip is still active and Animal Control found the 'owner'.

So I got a letter from my Vet confirming they're the same worms, copies of the 500 dollars in Vet bills, and the address of this incredibly irresponsible person.

She'll be getting a nice Summons to Small Claims Court to pay for my vet bills, time off work to go to Court, mileage to and from the Vet, and anything else I can think of.

When I get done with her this little episode of bad judgement is going to set her back a couple of thousand dollars.

Keep your cat on your property.

L

53 posted on 12/24/2008 8:28:02 AM PST by Lurker ("America is at that awkward stage. " Claire Wolfe, call your office.)
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To: Concho
I live in the middle of town and I kill them on sight also. Get one of those silenced air rifles. It is most effective on cats.

I saw someone doing that here and reported them to the police (a real one). He had to go to a hearing and was publicly embarassed. Made my day. He also got into trouble for firing an air rifle into a neighbor's yard. Wonder if he now regrets all the trouble his little "fun" caused him.

54 posted on 12/24/2008 8:35:37 AM PST by Hacksaw
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To: Kirkwood

The safety issue depends a lot on where you live. At my suburban home, it’s pretty safe. Only one of my cats has ever been hit by a car and he was 15 years old, slowing down, and simply refused to spend any time inside except to eat. He had a good long life, and died quickly, doing what he loved to do. Lost one last year at age 21 to a pulmonary embolism — he’d enjoyed roaming outdoors his whole life, right up to the day before he died. Another had to be put to sleep at age 19ish due to heart and liver failure, and he’d enjoyed the outdoors for the 3.5 years since I’d adopted him from a shelter.

We scatter bird seen in the driveway every day, and have a little pond/fountain most of the year, replaced by an electric-warmed water bowl in the winter. My bird population is definitely thriving. Once in a while, one of the cats gets a bird, but any of my cats who shows serious interest and aptitude for bird-catching is quickly outfitted with a loud collar-bell, which puts a stop to catchings of any but old or sick birds.


55 posted on 12/24/2008 8:44:23 AM PST by GovernmentShrinker
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To: Fawn

Yes they do.


56 posted on 12/24/2008 8:55:51 AM PST by aliquando (A Scout is T, L, H, F, C, K, O, C, T, B, C, and R.)
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To: GovernmentShrinker

You had a cat hit by a car and you still think it is a good idea to let them roam? Disgusting.


57 posted on 12/24/2008 8:55:58 AM PST by Kirkwood
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To: Lurker

Oh Please......get a life.


58 posted on 12/24/2008 9:14:23 AM PST by Fawn (I want my bailout too!!!!)
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To: aliquando

Well..many laws like many people are warped and outdated....


59 posted on 12/24/2008 9:16:00 AM PST by Fawn (I want my bailout too!!!!)
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To: Lurker
If you responsibly watched your dog so it didn't eat cat poop, it wouldn't of had worms...if that is where they got it. But, worms die quickly when pooped out. Sounds like you probably saw the cat and sicked the dogs on it? But then again dogs are disgusting garbage disposals and eat anything and everything so who knows what it ate to get worms. Are you worried about the birds? You should be...better start putting out the traps or you're a BIG hypocrit:

It's unbelievable the diseases that BIRDS BRING TO YOUR BACK YARD

~~~

Air Sack Mites ... Air Sack Rupture ... Allergic Alveolitis ... Anatomy (Avian) ... Aspergillosis ... Avian Brain Disease ... Avian Flu ... Avian Goiter (Thyroid Hyperplasia or Dysplasia) ... Avian Gout ... Avian Influenza ... Avian Pox ... Avian Tuberculosis (Mycobacterium avium) Bacterial Infections ... Baldness ... Beak & Feather Disease ... Beak Problems / Deformities ... Bird Fancier's / Breeders Lungs (Allergic Alvolitis) ... Bird Flu ... Bite Wounds ... Bleeding ... Blepharitis ... Blocked Gizzard ... Bordetella ... Botulism ... Brain Disease ... Breeding-related Problems ... Broken Legs / Toes ... Bronchitis ... Bumble Foot ... Bursal Disease Canary Pox Virus ... Candida / Candidiasis ... Cancer ... Canker (Trichomoniasis, more commonly known as “pigeon canker) ... Chick Deformities ... Chlamydia / Chlamydiosis ... Chronic Egg Laying ... Cryptosporidium / Coccidia ... Coccidiosis ... Conjunctivitis ... Coryza Diabetes ... Diarrhea Egg Binding ... Egg Laying (Chronic) ... Egg Yolk Peritonitis / Egg Peritonitis ... Emphysema ... Enteritis ... Eye Problems Fatty Tumors ... Feather Cysts / Feather Lumps ... Feather Disorders ... Feather Lice ... Feather Plucking / Chewing ... Fowl Cholera ... French Molt ... Fungal Infections Giardia ... Gizzard (Blocked) ... Gout Heavy Metal Poisoning ... Hemochromatosis ... Herpes ... Hypothyroidism Infectious Bronchitis ... Infectious Bursal Disease ... Infectious Coryza ... Infectious Sinusitis ... Influenza Kidney Disease / Problems Laryngotracheitis Lead Poisoning ... Liver Disease ... Lymhpoid Leukosis Macaw Wasting Disease ... Marek's Disease ... Megabacteria / Megabacteriosis ... Metal Poisoning ... Mites & Lice ... Mutilation ... Myialges Nudus ... Mycoplasmosis Necrotic Enteritis ... Neuropathic Gastric Dilatation ... Newcastles Disease ... Nutritional Disorders Omphalitis ... Overheating Pacheco's Disease ... Pasteurella ... Papilloma ... Parasites ... Parrot Fever ... PBFD ... Pneumonia ... Psittacosis / Chlamydiosis / Ornithosis ... Pseudomonas ... PDD ... Poisoning ... Polyoma ... Pox Virus ... Prolapsed Cloaca ... Psittacine Beak & Feather Disease. Regurgitation ... Respiratory Distress / Diseases Salmonella / Salmonellosis ... Sarcocystosis ... Scaly Face & Scaly Feet Disease ... Seizures ... Self / Skin-Mutilation ... Sinusitis ... Skin & Feather Disorders ... Stargazing Teflon Poisoning ... Thyroid Problems ... Tuberculosis ... Tumors (Cancer) ... Tumors (Fatty) ... Toxicities / Poisoning / Ingestion ... Trichomonas Visceral Gout ... Visceral Leukosis (Marek's Disease) ... Vomiting West Nile Virus ... Wet Vents Yeast Infections Zinc Poisoning ... Zoonotic (Bird / Human) Diseases ~~~~~~~~~~

60 posted on 12/24/2008 9:20:09 AM PST by Fawn (I want my bailout too!!!!)
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