The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Foxes get blame for ‘serial cat killer’ case

Pets: Police conclude no human involvemen­t in mutilation­s

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Police said foxes are thought to have been behind the Croydon cat killings, bringing a threeyear investigat­ion to a close.

Hundreds of cats are reported to have been mutilated across the south London borough since November 2015, prompting fears a serial killer of pets was on the loose.

Some reported finding animals decapitate­d, while others had their tails docked.

But Scotland Yard said there was “no evidence that any of the cats had been killed by a human”.

Croydon-educated actor Martin Clunes was among those to weigh in on the mystery, writing a letter to detectives urging them to catch the culprit

He wrote in February 2016: “I read with horror that some of the cats had been decapitate­d and dismembere­d – this is the stuff of nightmares.

“The local community is understand­ably distraught and frightened. No one feels safe while this sick individual is on the loose.”

Police said the postmortem examinatio­ns on an initial 25 cats found they succumbed to a blunt force trauma, such as being run over. Their bodies were said to have been mutilated after death.

Six cases were deemed to be suspicious and required investigat­ion, during which another 400 reports of cat mutilation­s were collated in and around London.

A S c o t l a n d Ya r d statement said: “The investigat­ion took almost three years, due to the number of reports and allegation­s received from the public and the need to work with specialist­s to scrutinise any evidence.

“No evidence of human involvemen­t was found in any of the reported cases.

“There were no witnesses, no identifiab­le patterns and no forensic leads that pointed to human involvemen­t.

In three cases, CCTV footage showed foxes carrying cats’ lifeless bodies in their jaws.

The Met said it “took note of expert opinion” which highlighte­d how wildlife can be known to scavenge on roadkill, often removing limbs before dumping the corpse.

Detectives announced yesterday that there is no evidence of human involvemen­t. All of the cases of cat mutilation will be recorded as “no crime”.

Chief Inspector Stuart Orton, who led the investigat­ion in Hertfordsh­ire, said: “By working closely with forensic experts, partners and colleagues, we have been able to eliminate the hypothesis that a person or persons were travelling the county and mutilating animals on a serial basis.

“As explained by our colleagues in the Metropolit­an Police, the evidence suggests that the animals had been predated by foxes – in a rabbit’s case after being removed from a hutch, and in a cat’s case after death, likely caused by a road traffic collision.

“I hope this conclusion brings comfort to pet owners who have, up until now, been frightened to let their animals out at night.”

“No one feels safewhilet­his sick individual is on the loose”

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