Cats rescued from Reed's apartment arrive at Austin Pets Alive! in September. (Courtesy: Austin Pets Alive!)_20101026125655_JPEG

Cats rescued from Reed's apartment arrive at Austin Pets Alive! in September. (Courtesy: Austin Pets Alive!)

Cats rescued from Reed's apartment arrive at Austin Pets Alive! in September. (Courtesy: Austin Pets Alive!)_20101026125655_JPEG

Cats rescued from Reed's apartment arrive at Austin Pets Alive! in September. (Courtesy: Austin Pets Alive!)

cats7_20101026125655_JPEG

Cats rescued from Reed's apartment arrive at Austin Pets Alive! in September. (Courtesy: Austin Pets Alive!)

cats6_20101026125655_JPEG

Cats rescued from Reed's apartment arrive at Austin Pets Alive! in September. (Courtesy: Austin Pets Alive!)

Animals removed from cat hoarder

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APD: Cat hoarder faces cruelty charge

More than 70 cats, many sick or dead, found

Updated: Tuesday, 26 Oct 2010, 4:59 PM CDT
Published : Tuesday, 26 Oct 2010, 12:39 PM CDT

AUSTIN (KXAN) - A suspected cat hoarder faces animal cruelty charges after police said she kept more than 70 cats in an abandoned apartment - and that all of them were either dead, sick or injured when found by the authorities.

A warrant has been issued for 32-year-old Katie Reed, with a bond set at $35,000 and the requirement that she wear an ankle monitor while she waits trial on the charges. But it was unclear Tuesday if she had been arrested.

A neighbor had complained to the apartment manager on Sept. 16 about a strong odor coming from the adjacent apartment, as well as sick cats outside on her porch.

"I observed cats everywhere I looked," one police officer reported after going inside..

Some 52 cats were rescued from the apartment, and 25 more were found dead in an abandoned refrigerator. The survivors were taken in by local rescue organizations to find new homes. Several of the cats were feral and several needed medical treatment. The Austin Humane Society took in about 24. Austin Pets Alive! took in 17. And Feral Folks and Shadow Cats took in about a dozen more. 

Reed was a volunteer foster for several area organizations. The Town Lake Animal Center and APA! have both said they either restricted the number of cats she was allowed to take in, or did home visits to make sure she wasn't hoarding. But the cats, as it turned out, were being kept in an apartment in which she apparently did not live and so no one ever checked that space.

On that day in September, police arrived on scene at the same time the apartment building's manager and a maintenance man were also coming to check on things. The manager told police she had already started eviction proceedings against Reed because the apartment was in such poor condition. The manager said Reed had told them she was locked out of the apartment, and was on her way there.

According to the affidavit, police could smell the cat urine before they got to the front door. When Reed arrived, she circled the complex parking lot a few times in her Honda Accord, waving at the officers. Police could see several cats in the car, in her lap and on her shoulder, as she drove. Then she parked - crooked, under a tree, with a tire on the curb - in the space furthest form the apartment, though several were open that were closer.

Police said that she left the car running, with one window down. She got out barefoot and appeared "disheveled," covered in cat hair and fresh scratches - some of which were still bleeding - and with what appeared to be dried paint and debris in her hair.

"She appeared as though she'd been sleeping in her car," the affidavit said.

When the group went inside, the first thing they saw was a dead black-and-white cat blocking the front door. Reed explained that the cat probably had died because she had been locked out the night before, police said. Then, investigators got a look at the rest of the apartment. There was very little furniture in the apartment, a refrigerator was turned on its side, and the stench was so bad that police said they had trouble breathing even through surgical masks.

"I observed cats everywhere I looked," an investigator wrote in the affidavit. "There were cats on top of the kitchen counters, kitchen cupboards, in the fireplace, in the closets, in the bathroom, and throughout the floors (sic). Some cats seemed friendly, and others appeared feral and trying to hide. All the cats I observed were either sneezing or had green discharge coming from the nose and eyes. At least one cat I observed had an open abscess ... This cat appeared very skinny and had trouble keeping his balance when walking."

When investigators open the unplugged refrigerator, more than a dozen dead cats were found inside.

Police then checked on the cats in Reed's car and found two dead cats in the passenger seat, with "two live cats hugged up to the dead cats." Between 10 and 15 cats were in the car, and all the live ones were sick, police said. The seats were coated with cat urine and feces.

Crime Clean of Texas, a private company hired by the building management company, discovered gross filth throughout the apartment, along with associated structural damage.

The company found a high level of ammonia, commonly associated with cat urine, in the apartment and warned that women who are pregnant, or may be pregnant, should not enter into the apartment. Other observations made, according to the police report, were that feces was "readily visible on doors, woodwork, flooring, baseboards, windows and walls...concrete and wood are urine-soaked and have ground-in feces..all tack board and baseboards were soaked with urine in all living areas...ceramic tile and grout are saturated with urine and ground-in feces."

The entire apartment, basically, would have to be gutted in order to make it a safe and sanitary place to live again, police said.

The cruelty to nonlivestock animals charge is a Class A misdemeanor.

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