A SELBY widow is planning to make a formal complaint to the RSPCA after her cat was seized by the animal charity and put down just hours after he went missing from her home.
Ann Baker, 79, said Nightshift – a neutered male tabby, who she had kept since 1992 – was her last living link with her retired university professor husband Clyde Manwell, who died in December 2007.
Ann, who lives close to Selby Abbey, said: "I'm very upset – furious. They just put Nightshift down as if he was so much rubbish. They tried to justify it by saying he was old.
"I told them well I'm old too! Then they said he had most of his teeth missing. Well, I have no teeth at all! It was just like something out of Nazi Germany."
Ann said Nightshift had been taken ill and was treated at a highly-regarded vets in Howden on August 30 for respiratory difficulties.
5 comments:
How interesting - animal rights were at the forefront of the Nazi's attempts to persuade the German people that they were kind and decent people. In fact they outlawed all manner of activities, but just enforced the law against Jews and others they wanted to exterminate.
bloody nazis had principle, not like these tossers
the rspca took my grandads cat a few years ago, said he couldnt look after it, a nosey neighbour had grassed him up, telling the rspca a load of lies, they came round dressed like coppers and freightened grandad to death, cautioned him, threatening to prosecute him for ommission of care, they took the cat and killed it, very compassionate, left grandad all alone, no one to talk to, rspca are scum
the arsepca make the nazis look like wimps
the faster the rspca knobheads are controlled the better for humanity
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