Lancaster ‘Cat House’ Horror: 78 Ragdoll Felines Pulled From Filthy Home

What started as a cruelty complaint in Lancaster County ended with 78 Ragdoll cats and kittens being pulled out of a single home and into the care of the Pennsylvania SPCA. Many of the adult cats are already headed for new lives, with adoptions opening at the PSPCA’s Hunting Park headquarters on Monday, while the youngest kittens remain in foster care until they are ready for homes of their own.

Investigators say the animals were found free-roaming in rooms choked with trash, feces and urine. For now, the cats are getting veterinary exams, clean bedding and regular meals while PSPCA staff, working with local police, continue to sort out exactly how things got so bad inside that Lancaster house.

Rescue And Conditions

Animal law enforcement officers served a search warrant on a home in the 300 block of Spencer Avenue last Tuesday after a tip led them to the property, where they removed 78 Ragdoll cats and kittens from the residence, according to NBC10 Philadelphia. Inside, investigators reported rooms packed floor to ceiling with debris and ammonia levels so high they complicated the already grueling rescue.

Nicole Wilson, the PSPCA’s director of animal law enforcement, said officers “endured hours of extreme heat and extreme ammonia levels” while working to get every last cat out of the home safely. The scene, she indicated, was not just messy, it was dangerous for people and animals alike.

Which Cats Are Available

Many of the adult Ragdoll cats are now being made available for adoption at the PSPCA’s Philadelphia headquarters in Hunting Park as of Monday, while the rescued kittens are staying in foster care until they are old enough to be spayed or neutered and vaccinated. Adoptions are being processed on a first-come, first-served basis, with the PSPCA sticking to its standard screening requirements and fees, according to 6abc.

How To Adopt Or Help

The PSPCA has posted details about the rescue, adoption process and ways to help through donations and support on the PSPCA website. Those contributions help cover medical exams, treatment and daily care for the cats while they recover…

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