InvestorsHub Logo
Post# of 39180
Next 10
Followers 120
Posts 67138
Boards Moderated 0
Alias Born 01/07/2013

Re: None

Friday, 05/11/2018 10:26:13 PM

Friday, May 11, 2018 10:26:13 PM

Post# of 39180
3 hurt in San Antonio after family takes home kittens, finds out — painfully — they are bobcats.
May 10, 2018

A Texas family with good intentions tried to save a group of stray kittens. They learned the hard way that the little critters were baby bobcats.

The fur is flying after three people in San Antonio were injured by two bobcat cubs they mistook for domestic kittens.

The cuter-than-cute critters were found by a family and taken home. And that’s when the feisty felines attacked.

"She tried to feed them some kitten milk, and during the process of doing that, three people were bitten," said Lisa Norwood, a spokesperson for the local Animal Care Services agency (ACS). "Not bad bites, but bites nonetheless. They're seeking medical attention right now."

After the incident, Norwood told San Antonio TV station KENS on Monday, the family decided to look online and noticed the young animals were bobcats.

"Once they started taking a look at the kittens, seeing how big they were, how robust they were, how their tails were bobbed," they started thinking, " 'You know what, these don't look like your standard house cat. Maybe we should call somebody.' Thankfully, they did," Norwood said.



An ACS officer took the baby bobcats to Wildlife Rescue & Rehabilitation, a local animal-advocacy charity, where they are under quarantine. A spokesperson for the rehab center told the station that they will be monitored to make sure they can be released to a protected site. Adult bobcats can weigh as much as 40 pounds.

The family who found the animals, however, now faces trouble, KENS reported on Wednesday. Rather than being found in a back alley, as the family claimed, investigators now believe that the young bobcats were actually found in Atascosa County, a rural area southwest of San Antonio, by a relative of the bite victims. According to ACS, this person believed the animals were Bengal kittens, a highly prized domestic breed.

In light of the new information, the ACS Field Enforcement Division is working with the Texas State Parks and Wildlife agency to determine whether charges will be filed in connection with illegal disturbance of wild animals.

https://www.usatoday.com/videos/news/nation/2018/05/10/those-not-house-cats/597565002/
Join InvestorsHub

Join the InvestorsHub Community

Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.