Albuquerque Journal

Cat-alyst of CHAOS

A rogue cat who ‘will not be contained’ keeps trying to free his shelter comrades

- BY ANTONIA NOORI FARZAN

Walls and doors can’t hold back Quilty, the rogue cat who will not behave.

The unruly feline has become famous in recent weeks for sowing chaos at the Houston animal shelter, where he broke out of his confines several times a day, often setting his cat comrades free in the process. Somehow capable of prying open heavy doors despite his diminutive stature and lack of opposable thumbs, he exasperate­d his handlers with his crafty ways.

“Quilty will not be contained,” Friends for Life Animal Rescue and Adoption Organizati­on wrote on Facebook last month, posting photos of a decidedly guilty-looking Quilty meowing from his cat jail. “And he has no shame.”

But as it turns out, people love meddlesome cats who refuse to apologize for their devious behavior. The shelter’s frequent updates about Quilty’s latest crimes have turned him into an internet celebrity with nearly 30,000 Instagram followers and, on Tuesday night, he got a special shout-out on Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show With Trevor Noah.” As of Wednesday morning, Friends for Life’s original Facebook post had been shared more than 16,000 times. Meanwhile, Quilty has found what the shelter hopes will be a permanent home, and appears to have put his life of crime aside in favor of placidly napping with his new owner.

“He has all of them fooled!” the shelter wrote on Facebook.

Oddly named after the pornograph­er who abducts a teenage girl in Vladimir Nabokov’s “Lolita,” Quilty was born at Friends for Life and adopted at a young age. But his owner moved away and wasn’t able to take him along, the Houston Chronicle reported. Several months before his social media debut, Quilty returned to the shelter.

He soon started leading afterhours insurrecti­ons — though it took a little while for staffers to realize that he was the ringleader.

“We would come in in the morning and have to collect all

15 of the cats who had had a blast during the night,” Jennifer Hopkins, Friends for Life spokeswoma­n, told CNN.

Like the seasoned crime scene investigat­ors that they are, the shelter’s employees pored through surveillan­ce tapes to find their culprit. The security footage pointed to one suspect: Quilty.

As Friends for Life explained on Facebook, the rambunctio­us tabby had perfected his technique at his former owner’s home, where he inexplicab­ly felt compelled to open the door for the family dog. At the shelter, while the rest of the world slept, he would get up on his hind legs and fling himself into the air, grabbing the door handle with his paws and pulling it down. The door would spring open and the feline rampage would begin.

Because Friends for Life uses a “free roam” model where cats cohabitate in shared rooms, rather than being held in individual cages, Quilty couldn’t free himself without also freeing the other denizens of the senior room. Tired of being greeted with feline anarchy first thing in the morning, staffers temporaril­y banished him to the lobby while they “Quilty-proofed” the room.

But the wily, irrepressi­ble cat wasn’t done causing a ruckus. When he made his heralded return to the senior room, Quilty had to first spend some time in an “integratio­n kennel” so that he could readjust to his surroundin­gs. He was not pleased.

“THE DISPLEASUR­E!” the shelter wrote on Facebook. “He is being a spicy a-hole now because he is, once again, contained … .”

Sure enough, several days later, Quilty found a way to bust out of the integratio­n kennel. “He has been returned to solitary,” Friends for Life reported. “The review board will take up his case again tomorrow.”

Even so, Quilty continued with his antics. Employees at the shelter caught the freedom-loving cat franticall­y pawing at a window and flopping around while aggressive­ly pummeling a door. He also managed to crash a staff meeting. “Quilty is not a smol boi, but he sure does sneak like one,” the shelter wrote on Facebook.

Meanwhile, the #FreeQuilty movement was taking off. The more crimes the bold cat committed, the more his fan base grew. Answering popular demand, the shelter’s staffers slapped his face on shirts and stickers, and began selling black #FreeQuilty wristbands. They also held a mock news conference last Friday, where they refused to comment on a possible book deal, but confirmed that Quilty had launched an explorator­y committee for a presidenti­al run in 2020.

Despite his criminal ways, “spicy” personalit­y and propensity for leading feline uprisings, people began clamoring to adopt Quilty. The shelter invited supporters to come in and wish him luck as he went off for a one-week trial in his potential new home.

“Good luck to any family that adopts Quilty,” comedian Roy Wood Jr. joked on “The Daily Show.” “The parents are going to come home and look around the house, and they’re going to be like, ‘Hey! Who opened the baby gate?’ Quilty’s going to be like, ‘Hey, I don’t believe that kids should be in cages.’ ”

“In fact,” he added, “maybe this cat should be in charge of the immigratio­n policy.”

So far, though, Quilty appears to be turning over a new leaf. On Tuesday, Friends for Life shared an update from his prospectiv­e new owner, who reported that the reformed felon was “the most loving and affectiona­te cat I have ever met!”

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 ?? COURTESY OF FRIENDS FOR LIFE ?? TOP: Quilty loved to let cats out of the senior room.
FAR LEFT: After Quilty was returned to solitary, a #FreeQuilty movement took off.
LEFT: Quilty is now in his new furever home and is a reformed cat!
COURTESY OF FRIENDS FOR LIFE TOP: Quilty loved to let cats out of the senior room. FAR LEFT: After Quilty was returned to solitary, a #FreeQuilty movement took off. LEFT: Quilty is now in his new furever home and is a reformed cat!
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