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Adam, the torched kitten, may need all 9 lives

With ear tips and tail amputated, he's vulnerable to infection -- burned back is

an open wound

 

Peter Fimrite, Chronicle Staff Writer

 

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

 

 

 

It is difficult to quantify the will to live, but a tiny kitten that was set on

fire and nearly burned to death is as good an example as any.

 

Wrapped in towels in a cage at the Animal Hospital of Cotati, Adam, as the

hospital staff calls him, is struggling to survive against all odds.

 

The kitten was only 8 weeks old June 19 when two 15-year-old girls allegedly

poured flammable liquid on him while he was trapped in a cage and lit a match.

 

An 11-year-old boy and his friend saw the smoke and heard the cat shrieking amid

what they described as the girls' laughter. They found the kitten cowering near

death in bushes next to a creek and brought him to the apartment manager.

 

The girls, whose names have not been released, were charged in Sonoma County

Juvenile Court with felony cruelty to animals last week after an intensive

search, a $10,000 reward fund and a Bay Area-wide furor.

 

Little Adam purrs and bats playfully at toys in the dog-size cage inside the

hospital and has free rein in the master bedroom or in a playpen at the home of

head nurse Tina Wright, who takes him with her every night.

 

But he is a long way from being out of danger. His tail and the tips of his ears

had to be amputated, and his entire back is nothing but raw tissue, the skin

having been burned completely off.

 

" If left untreated, he would die, " said Dr. Katheryn Hinkle, the head

veterinarian and owner of the Animal Hospital. " He would get an infection. You

can't have that much open skin and not get an infection. He is also very

vulnerable to viral disease at this point. "

 

The kitten has already undergone two operations in which the surgeon stretched

skin from his sides and partially covered the open wound on his back. He will

need several more skin-stretching operations before the wound is closed,

including grafts from other areas of his body.

 

" Every week he's going to have some skin-grafting technique to close that big

gap on his back, " Hinkle said. " There's not enough skin on the sides to complete

the job. "

 

Hinkle said it will take at least two more surgeries and possibly several months

before Adam's exposed areas are covered. She said the most difficult part is the

feline's rear end. " He's got pieces of his pelvic bone sticking out, " she said.

 

" The degree of injury is greater than our normal level of trauma that we care

for, " Hinkle said. " He's our most critical patient, and we're watching him

constantly. "

 

Adam cannot leave his cage inside the hospital because of the danger of

contamination, and nobody is allowed to touch him without gloves. His bandages

are changed every morning at 7 a.m. He eats both dry and wet cat food except

after surgery, when he is on an intravenous pump for 24 hours to monitor his

intake of fluids, medicines and painkillers.

 

" Monitoring the IV pump requires me to stay up all night, " Wright said. " It is

exactly like having an infant. I have to haul all the stuff back to work in a

diaper bag. "

 

The kitten was one of six feral litter mates captured along with a male cat on a

Santa Rosa farm and brought back to the trapper's apartment in the Apple Valley

neighborhood. The plan was to get the cats spayed and neutered at Forgotten

Felines of Sonoma County, an organization dedicated to controlling wild cat

populations humanely. The cats were to be turned loose on the farm again after

being sterilized.

 

The trapper left three cages on his porch overnight, but the two containing the

other five kittens were stolen. The male cat was left on the porch, and nobody

knows for sure what happened to the other kittens.

 

The barbarity Adam endured stunned and angered community leaders, who cite

studies showing that young people who abuse animals are more likely to someday

abuse people.

 

" Hurting or terrorizing or torturing animals is one symptom of conduct

disorder, " said Lisa Boesky, a San Diego-based clinical psychologist, who

specializes in identifying violent tendencies in juveniles. " We need to ask the

question, 'Why did they do this?,' and then address that. "

 

The money and attention being lavished on Adam has angered many in the

neighborhood, where a 16-year-old boy was killed a year ago to much less

outrage.

 

" The mentality here is: They can put up a reward for a burned cat, but they

can't put up a reward for a kid who got killed, " said Shawna Shaffer, the

apartment manager who called for help after the kitten was brought to her

office. " But we're talking (in both cases) about the way kids are being raised

in this neighborhood. "

 

Some are questioning the decision to keep the cat alive at considerable expense

instead of putting it out of its misery. The surgeries and care alone will

probably total from $20,000 to $30,000, Hinkle said. Money is being raised by

Forgotten Felines, and the veterinary surgeon, Lisa Alexander, has been

operating pro bono.

 

" He is fighting for his life, so we would never bail out on him at this point, "

Hinkle said. " This is what compassion looks like, what the children in that

neighborhood need more of in their lives.

 

" From my perspective, those girls need more help than this kitten. My goal for

Adam is for him to be the poster child for what the community can do if it comes

together. "

 

Adam's next surgery will probably be on Thursday or Friday. " In the end, he'll

be adopted into a good home, " said Wright, who also works for Forgotten Felines.

" I have the option (to adopt him), but I try not to think too far ahead. "

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What is wrong with some people???

 

There was an article on the telly yesterday where a man had been

asleep on Clapham Common on a sunny afternoon and woke up in terrible

pain and panic - some people had poured petrol on his legs and set

him alight. He has had many skin grafts, and apparently his leg

muscles were burnt through :-(

 

Jo

 

, fraggle <EBbrewpunx wrote:

>

> Adam, the torched kitten, may need all 9 lives

> With ear tips and tail amputated, he's vulnerable to infection --

burned back is an open wound

>

> Peter Fimrite, Chronicle Staff Writer

>

> Wednesday, July 18, 2007

>

>

>

> It is difficult to quantify the will to live, but a tiny kitten

that was set on fire and nearly burned to death is as good an example

as any.

>

> Wrapped in towels in a cage at the Animal Hospital of Cotati, Adam,

as the hospital staff calls him, is struggling to survive against all

odds.

>

> The kitten was only 8 weeks old June 19 when two 15-year-old girls

allegedly poured flammable liquid on him while he was trapped in a

cage and lit a match.

>

> An 11-year-old boy and his friend saw the smoke and heard the cat

shrieking amid what they described as the girls' laughter. They found

the kitten cowering near death in bushes next to a creek and brought

him to the apartment manager.

>

> The girls, whose names have not been released, were charged in

Sonoma County Juvenile Court with felony cruelty to animals last week

after an intensive search, a $10,000 reward fund and a Bay Area-wide

furor.

>

> Little Adam purrs and bats playfully at toys in the dog-size cage

inside the hospital and has free rein in the master bedroom or in a

playpen at the home of head nurse Tina Wright, who takes him with her

every night.

>

> But he is a long way from being out of danger. His tail and the

tips of his ears had to be amputated, and his entire back is nothing

but raw tissue, the skin having been burned completely off.

>

> " If left untreated, he would die, " said Dr. Katheryn Hinkle, the

head veterinarian and owner of the Animal Hospital. " He would get an

infection. You can't have that much open skin and not get an

infection. He is also very vulnerable to viral disease at this point. "

>

> The kitten has already undergone two operations in which the

surgeon stretched skin from his sides and partially covered the open

wound on his back. He will need several more skin-stretching

operations before the wound is closed, including grafts from other

areas of his body.

>

> " Every week he's going to have some skin-grafting technique to

close that big gap on his back, " Hinkle said. " There's not enough

skin on the sides to complete the job. "

>

> Hinkle said it will take at least two more surgeries and possibly

several months before Adam's exposed areas are covered. She said the

most difficult part is the feline's rear end. " He's got pieces of his

pelvic bone sticking out, " she said.

>

> " The degree of injury is greater than our normal level of trauma

that we care for, " Hinkle said. " He's our most critical patient, and

we're watching him constantly. "

>

> Adam cannot leave his cage inside the hospital because of the

danger of contamination, and nobody is allowed to touch him without

gloves. His bandages are changed every morning at 7 a.m. He eats both

dry and wet cat food except after surgery, when he is on an

intravenous pump for 24 hours to monitor his intake of fluids,

medicines and painkillers.

>

> " Monitoring the IV pump requires me to stay up all night, " Wright

said. " It is exactly like having an infant. I have to haul all the

stuff back to work in a diaper bag. "

>

> The kitten was one of six feral litter mates captured along with a

male cat on a Santa Rosa farm and brought back to the trapper's

apartment in the Apple Valley neighborhood. The plan was to get the

cats spayed and neutered at Forgotten Felines of Sonoma County, an

organization dedicated to controlling wild cat populations humanely.

The cats were to be turned loose on the farm again after being

sterilized.

>

> The trapper left three cages on his porch overnight, but the two

containing the other five kittens were stolen. The male cat was left

on the porch, and nobody knows for sure what happened to the other

kittens.

>

> The barbarity Adam endured stunned and angered community leaders,

who cite studies showing that young people who abuse animals are more

likely to someday abuse people.

>

> " Hurting or terrorizing or torturing animals is one symptom of

conduct disorder, " said Lisa Boesky, a San Diego-based clinical

psychologist, who specializes in identifying violent tendencies in

juveniles. " We need to ask the question, 'Why did they do this?,' and

then address that. "

>

> The money and attention being lavished on Adam has angered many in

the neighborhood, where a 16-year-old boy was killed a year ago to

much less outrage.

>

> " The mentality here is: They can put up a reward for a burned cat,

but they can't put up a reward for a kid who got killed, " said Shawna

Shaffer, the apartment manager who called for help after the kitten

was brought to her office. " But we're talking (in both cases) about

the way kids are being raised in this neighborhood. "

>

> Some are questioning the decision to keep the cat alive at

considerable expense instead of putting it out of its misery. The

surgeries and care alone will probably total from $20,000 to $30,000,

Hinkle said. Money is being raised by Forgotten Felines, and the

veterinary surgeon, Lisa Alexander, has been operating pro bono.

>

> " He is fighting for his life, so we would never bail out on him at

this point, " Hinkle said. " This is what compassion looks like, what

the children in that neighborhood need more of in their lives.

>

> " From my perspective, those girls need more help than this kitten.

My goal for Adam is for him to be the poster child for what the

community can do if it comes together. "

>

> Adam's next surgery will probably be on Thursday or Friday. " In the

end, he'll be adopted into a good home, " said Wright, who also works

for Forgotten Felines. " I have the option (to adopt him), but I try

not to think too far ahead. "

>

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