PETA Offers Gbp1,000 To Help Nab Cat Attacker
For Immediate Release:
10 July 2009
Contact:
Sam Glover 020 7357 9229, ext 229; [email protected]
Terrington St Clement, Norfolk – In what is believed to have been a horrific act of cruelty, a cat was shot with a crossbow in Terrington St Clement during the week of June 23. An 11-month-old tabby named Dave miraculously survived and made it home after he spent a week with a 14-inch crossbow bolt piercing his body.
PETA is offering a reward of up to £1,000 for information that leads to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons responsible for this horrific crime.
Norfolk residents have good reason to be concerned about cruelty-to-animals cases such as this. History shows that serial rapists and murderers often have backgrounds which include incidents involving cruelty to animals. Child-killers Mary Bell, Robert Thompson and Jon Venables as well as serial murderers Ian Huntley, Thomas Hamilton (Dunblane massacre), Fred West, Denis Nilsen, Ian Brady and Jeffrey Dahmer all started out by deliberately harming animals.
PETA is urging residents to keep a watchful eye on their animals and to keep them indoors. Because animals cannot report their own abuse and can do little to fight back, they are the perfect “practice” victims for those who tend towards violence.
“Animal abusers are cowards”, says PETA spokesperson Suzanne Barnard. “They take their issues out on the most defenceless beings available to them.”
Anyone with information about this case is encouraged to call the Norfolk Police on 0845 456 4567.
For more information about the link between cruelty to animals and violence towards humans (or to find free humane education resources), please visit PETAF.org.uk.