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AgentSun
05-23-2005, 03:11 PM
uggh...as admirable as this woman's No-Kill concept is, I really hope they end up taking away her animals and giving them better treatment.

200 Dead Cats Found in N.J. Woman's Home (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/dead_cats&printer=1)

Mon May 23, 8:24 AM ET

A woman who founded a "no-kill" animal shelter was charged with health code and animal welfare violations after 200 dead cats were discovered rotting in garbage bags in her backyard.

Marlene Kess, who has built a reputation in Manhattan as a caretaker of homeless and dying cats, had 48 cats inside her house, including 38 in one room, authorities said.

Out back, 200 vermin-infested cat corpses were stuffed into garbage bags and apparently were going to be buried in a large hole that had recently been dug, said Sgt. Joseph Bierman of the state's Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

The cats were discovered after neighbors complained about the stench.

"Oh my God, it was awful," said Michael Fowler of the Associated Humane Societies. "The smell was horrible."

Kess, 56, is the founder and executive director of Kitty-Kind, which runs one of New York City's few no-kill shelters.

She said the cats died of natural causes. State SPCA spokesman Matt Stanton told The Star-Ledger of Newark an investigation into the death of the cats is "ongoing."

A longtime resident of Greenwich Village, Kess moved to East Orange in July.

"I take very good care of them," Kess told reporters Friday. "People who know me know there's no cruelty involved."

Kess was cited for health code violations, including keeping an unlawful number of animals, harboring dead animals and causing an environmental hazard with the corpses. The SPCA, which enforces the state's animal cruelty laws, charged Kess with 38 counts of failing to properly shelter cats.

Authorities are allowing Kess to keep the 48 cats in her home because she promised to separate the sick animals from the healthy ones, Bierman said.

Copyright © 2005 The Associated Press. Al

scrape_medic
05-23-2005, 04:18 PM
Not sure how humane the idea of keeping 48 cats in one house is.....death might have been a more humane alternative.

Judith
05-23-2005, 04:51 PM
This is why it's important to check out a rescue or no kill shelter before donating or surrenderring an animal to them.

Anyone can claim to be a rescue.

A good indicator is whether or not a shelter is a 501 (c)(3) organization. If they are, they're more likely to be legitimate.

zahncrelnik
05-24-2005, 08:34 AM
OMG, did she think she was doing a good thing?

scaper4eva
05-24-2005, 09:42 AM
eeewwwww the smell, and well its just plain cruel.

NYPinTA
05-24-2005, 10:30 AM
I don't know what happens to people that start collecting animals like that. I can completely understand the urge to want to help the animals, but there are limits to what a person can do! And having that many animals in an enclosed space is not helping!
Poor kitties.

Judith
05-24-2005, 11:48 AM
I don't know what happens to people that start collecting animals like that. I can completely understand the urge to want to help the animals, but there are limits to what a person can do! And having that many animals in an enclosed space is not helping!
Poor kitties.

Well, people who hoard animals aren't thinking rationally. A lot of these people have pretty profound mental disorders. Not saying that excuses their actions though.

AgentSun
05-24-2005, 01:28 PM
hoarding is a pretty common obsessive compulsive disorder. it can be hoarding everything but i suspect that on a more specific level, it can be attributed to animals also. the root of the hoarding OCD is that of control and of feeling anxiety if one does not keep something. it's like a feeling of loss if you were to give away something or if you weren't going to keep something, only with these hoarders it can be a gum wrapper or an old bagel, you know? it's irrational and this woman's obviously off her rocker.

Judith
05-24-2005, 02:44 PM
Here are some sites that talk about animal hoarding and its effects on both the animals and humans that live in these conditions.
Go here (http://www.tufts.edu/vet/cfa/hoarding/)

And here (http://www.hsus2.org/sheltering/library/animal_hoarders.html)

NYPinTA
05-24-2005, 02:58 PM
Is it just me or is it happening more and more? Even around where I live there have been increased stories about people with tons of dogs or cats.
Usually the ones with the dogs are using them to sell... you know, puppy farms. The cats though just seem to be something they collect and never do anything with....
Weird.

AgentSun
05-24-2005, 07:04 PM
it's Plane Crash Syndrome, actually.

planes don't crash all the time and in fact, thousands of flights go out every day and none of them will crash. But the fact that it's so rare means that if two planes happen to crash within one month, we'll think it's happening more and more. The news anchor doesn't go on the 11 o'clock news and say, "Today no planes crashed."

Same with animal hoarding. It's becoming more and more common but it's still pretty rare that when it is found out, it becomes news and if a string of unrelated cases pop up in a certain bit of time, we start thinking "it's happening more and more!"