Daily Mail

My cat poison warning was ignored Owner who saw his three pets die in a week ‘fobbed off’ by Sainsbury’s when he flagged up food risk

- By Andy Jehring Has your pet been affected? Email us at cats@dailymail.co.uk

PET food suppliers were warned about the cat ‘poisoning’ scandal two months before the full product recall but did nothing, the Daily Mail can reveal.

Glenn Harmon, 56, told Sainsbury’s his vets believed their hypoallerg­enic recipe was responsibl­e for killing all three of his pets in one week on April 22.

But the store replied nearly a month later saying it had carried out a ‘full report’ which found ‘no issues’ and claimed they had ‘no other complaints of sickness for this product’. Mr Harmon flagged that vets were finding cases across the country on May 29 and says he attached a full post-mortem report for one of his pets but got no response. Two weeks later the Food Standards nary College (RVC) and FSA are Agency (FSA) issued a voluntary investigat­ing. Mr Harmon, an recall of Sainsbury’s hypoallerg­enic architect who lives with his beekeeper recipe as well as Applaws wife Jodi Moger, 55, in and Pets at Home’s AVA. Shipham, Somerset, said: ‘They

A direct link has not yet been are trying to spin the narrative. proven between the premium ‘They wanted to make it out that brands which are made by Fold this was some mystery illness that Hill Foods but the Royal Veteri- had nothing to do with the cat food, but it was clear there was a link. We are not after revenge, we just want someone to hold their hands up and apologise.’

The couple first noticed something was wrong when Lucy, their nine-year-old ginger cat, collapsed ‘out of the blue’ on April 16. They had to put her down and the vets believed she had leukaemia – until their five-year-old Siamese, Dagney, was struck down just 48 hours later and also had to be euthanised. Mr Harmon brought in Lena, his one-year-old moggy, to run tests as a precaution but they showed she had dangerousl­y low counts of platelets and red and white blood cells. She deteriorat­ed rapidly and didn’t make it through the night.

‘It was absolutely devastatin­g,’ said Mr Harmon, who has a daughter Fuchsia, 16. ‘It is probably the worst thing my daughter has ever experience­d. I know you can say they are just pets, but they are

also part of the family.’ He has since got two new kittens, Daisy and Rosie.

Mr Harmon’s vets told him to contact Sainsbury’s because their working diagnosis suggested the pet food was responsibl­e for the pancytopen­ia – when blood cell count falls rapidly. ‘Basically I had to alert Sainsbury’s that their food was the smoking gun and they needed to recall it and run tests.

‘It was the only link. But they were not accommodat­ing. They were immediatel­y defensive. They took three weeks to come back to me and basically washed their hands of it.’

The RVC said it first notified the FSA about an increase in cases on May 24 – exactly a week after Mr Harmon says Sainsbury’s told him it had not had any other reports.

The recall was issued on June 15. At least 330 cats have died from the illness, according to the RVC, but the true number may be higher.

On Saturday, the Mail revealed a case from March, three months before the recall. Fold Hill Foods said: ‘We continue to fully co-operate with both the FSA and the Royal Veterinary College as they continue to investigat­e all potential causes of the pancytopen­ia cases, feed and non-feed related.’

Pets At Home is working with experts to find the source of the illness. Sainsbury’s previously said it was supporting the investigat­ion and urged customers who had already bought the selected products to return them immediatel­y.

The supermarke­t did not respond to a request for comment on the latest claims.

 ??  ?? Struck down: Five-year-old Siamese Dagney
Struck down: Five-year-old Siamese Dagney
 ??  ?? Collapsed: Lucy was thought to have leukaemia
Collapsed: Lucy was thought to have leukaemia
 ??  ?? New additions: Glenn with Daisy (top) and Rosie
New additions: Glenn with Daisy (top) and Rosie
 ??  ?? Tests: Lena, aged one, deteriorat­ed rapidly and died
Tests: Lena, aged one, deteriorat­ed rapidly and died
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom