In a Sad and Violent Dénouement to a Long and Happy Life, Cleo Is Brutally Slain and Mutilated in a South London Park, Reigniting Fears that the Croydon Cat Killer May Have Struck Again
Although Elderly, Cleo Still Had an Awful Lot of Life Left in Her |
"The cat... was discovered in an unnatural position in the park with a severed head and her abdomen cut open from the right side of her chest to just above the intestines."-- Lee Ricketts of the RSPCA
Cleo was a beautiful, twenty-year-old brown and white female who had spent her entire life with the same owner. The mere fact that she had lived for so very long and was in such good health is proof that her unidentified owner had loved her dearly and had taken especially good care of her.
On the evening of Thursday, September 21st she went outside as was her custom but, unlike on all those previous occasions, this time she never returned. At around 11 a.m. the following day her lifeless body was found by a passerby in Maryon Wilson Park on Thorntree Road in Charlton in the borough of Greenwich in southeast London.
Even more disturbing, she did not die an easy death but rather she had been decapitated and her abdomen sliced open. It is difficult to imagine a more painful, gruesome, and horrifying way for her long and happy life to have ended.
"This was a sad and disturbing discovery for the member of the public who found this cat and absolutely devastating for her poor owner," "Rickety" Lee Ricketts of the RSPCA told My London.com on September 30th. (See "Elderly Cat Found Dead with Head Completely Severed in South London Park.") "The cat... was discovered in an unnatural position in the park with a severed head and her abdomen cut open from the right side of her chest to just above the intestines."
Although sheep, goats, pigs, horses, deer, and ducks reside in the park, it is extremely unlikely that any of them would have had either the desire or the means to have killed and dismembered Cleo. While it is not known if the facility is open to vehicular traffic, it seems unlikely that she could have been run down and killed by a hit-and-run motorist and then ripped open by an animal.
Forensic experts should have been able to have determined if the lethal damage inflicted upon her had been done by either a knife or some other sharp object as opposed to the teeth and claws of either a fox or a dog. Additionally, residual DNA left on her wounds should have shed some light on the perpetrator.
A 2018 Map of Where Most of the Killings Had Occurred Up Until Then |
Deplorably, the RSPCA is either behaving as its usual incompetent and uncaring self or unwilling to publicly disclose what it knows. "We don't know at this stage if she was predated on by another animal or if this was a deliberate act by a person but we are appealing for information to see if anyone may have any information," Ricketts ludicrously appealed to the public via My London.com.
First of all, absolutely nobody, animal or man, is about to come forward and confess in a million years. Secondly, it would appear even from afar that the RSPCA has all the forensic and DNA data at its disposal that it ever will need in order to make a determination as to either who or what killed Cleo.
The only obvious reason for the RSPCA's publicly professed cluelessness is that it has been too cheap and lazy to even have examined Cleo corpse for forensic evidence. It did, however, scan her remains for an implanted microchip and that is how that it was able to have identified her and located her distraught owner.
"The owner is understandably heartbroken and desperately wants answers as to what happened to their (sic) pet," Ricketts acknowledged to My London. "Cleo was relatively healthy for an elderly cat and had been a much-loved pet for two decades."
Identifying and bringing the culprit to justice will not bring Cleo back but her owner is most definitely entitled to an explanation as to what evil befell her. Regrettably, it is highly unlikely that she is going to receive much in the way of satisfaction from the thoroughly discredited RSPCA.
The organization's appalling lack of candor has in turn fueled suspicion that Cleo possibly could have been another victim of the Croydon Cat Killer who since 2014 is alleged to have killed and mutilated as many as five hundred cats in and around south London. Additional killings and mutilations have occurred in Surrey, Kent, and Hertfordshire and suspicious deaths also have been reported as far north as Northamptonshire and Manchester.
Boudicca Rising of SLAIN and Tony Jenkins of SNARL |
In Cleo's case, Charlton is a scant twenty-one kilometers northeast of the village of Croydon in the borough of the same name via the A222 motorway and therefore well within the killer's hunting ground. Scotland Yard, assisted by the late Mike Butcher and others from the RSPCA, belatedly opened a three-year investigation dubbed Operation Takahe into the killings in 2016 and during that period it allegedly devoted two-thousand-two-hundred-fifty man hours (about two-hundred-eighty-one, eight-hour days) and £140,000 to the effort.
Of that total, £6,000 went to forty-two necropsiers, £800 to reevaluating them for a second time, and another £1,300 conducting tests on the victims' fur. Compounding an already difficult investigation, there apparently were not any eyewitnesses to any of these violent killings and that in itself is astounding in a city the size of London.
For what it is worth, Scotland Yard also maintains that it never uncovered any forensic leads, identifiable patterns, and only three worthwhile pieces of CCTV surveillance footage. Yet, in spite of that paucity of evidence, it nevertheless concluded in September of 2018 that all the cats had been run down and killed by hit-and-run motorists and then mutilated by foxes.
Last year, researchers at the Royal Veterinary College (RVC) in London subjected thirty-two of the dead cats to necropsies, CT scans, and swabbed them for the presence of DNA evidence belonging to foxes, dogs, and badgers only to end up concurring with Scotland Yard that the vast majority of them had been killed by hit-and-run motorists and and afterwards scavenged by foxes. They also concluded that the foxes had killed ten of the cats outright, eight others had died of either cardiac or respiratory failure, six had died from blunt force trauma (most likely motorists), one of them had been poisoned with antifreeze, and one had died of liver failure. With six of the cats, the veterinarians were unable to pinpoint the cause of death.
It is unclear from the literature, but presumably the thirty-two cats that they examined were in addition to the forty-two that Scotland Yard had looked at earlier. Even so, seventy-four necropsies constitute considerably less than twenty per cent of the known victims and that it turn makes both Scotland Yard's and the RVC's studies considerably less than conclusive. (See the New Scientist, December 9, 2021, "London Cat 'Serial Killer' Was Just Foxes, DNA Analysis (sic) Confirm.")
Aggrieved cat owners in south London immediately denounced both studies as utter nonsense. "We have expert evidence to back this up, over the last three years, we have discounted over fifteen-hundred incidences as non-human related," Boudicca Rising, formerly with South Norwood Animal Rescue and Liberty (SNARL) but now with the South London Animal Investigation Network (SLAIN), declared to the Daily Mail on December 18, 2018. (See "Police Spent £140,000 and Two-Thousand-Two-Hundred-Fifty Man Hours to Determine Victims of So-Called Croydon Cat Killer Had Been in Fact Run over and Attacked by Foxes.")
Teddy, a Lionhead Rabbit, Was also Killed and Mutilated |
Despite Scotland Yard's assertion to the contrary, there is most definitely a discernible pattern of cats being divested of their heads, ears, tails, and legs, and their abdomens sliced open. There even have been reports of foxes being killed and mutilated as well as a beautiful lionhead rabbit named Teddy.
In some instances, severed body parts and even collars have been inexplicably returned to either the scene of the crime or to owners' gardens days, weeks, and even months later. "We had one case where a rabbit (presumably Teddy) was killed and, six months later, his head was returned to his garden in pristine condition," Rising related to the Daily Mail earlier on September 29, 2018. (See "They Framed Mr. Fox!") "That is not the work of foxes."
In another example, after an absolutely adorable eighteen-month-old tortoiseshell named Squiggles disappeared from her home in Addlestone, thirty kilometers southwest of London in Surrey, she later was found dead and mutilated. "She had both of her ears and tail cut off, one of the back legs was removed and she had been sliced from the neck all the way done," her then thirty-one-year-old owner, Hayley Gray, told the Daily Mail on December 18, 2018. "Foxes don't carry knives."
A similarly horrifying fate befell a longhaired brown and white tom named Theo from the village of Catford, nine kilometers southwest of Charlton in the borough of Lewisham, in April of 2021 when he was decapitated and divested of his tail. "It is so clearly not a road traffic accident or foxes," his then twenty-five-year-old owner Katherine Hughes told The Mirror of London on May 21, 2021. (See "Pet Owners Think 'Croydon Cat Killer' Is Back after Another Feline Is Slain and Mutilated.") "Foxes would not take the heads and bring them back. There would be more blood, claw marks or teeth marks."
She likewise does not believe that hit-and-run motorists are involved in the killings. "If a cat was hit by a car you would see dirt and broken bones," she added.
In June of 2018, Graham and Karen Young of Merstham, sixty-four kilometers southwest of Charlton in Surrey, lost their beloved nineteen-year-old tuxedo Bounce when he was killed, mutilated, and left in a neighbor's driveway. "I'm a trained butcher and recognize when flesh has been cut or torn and there is no way that my cat's head and tail were removed by a fox," he averred to the Daily Mail on September 29, 2018. "There were no impact marks, the head and tail were cut off cleanly with a blade and a week later, the tail was returned in exactly the same place. It was horrific."
This Headline in the Daily Mail on September 29, 2018 Said It All |
Given that body parts decompose rapidly, especially if they are left outside during warm weather, those that have been later returned to owners, such as the Youngs, surely must have been refrigerated during the interim otherwise there would not have been anything left of them to have returned. Even more telling, foxes do not own iceboxes.
In October of 2017, forty-four-year-old Jayne Galloway, a hairstylist from Potters Bar, fifty-two kilometers northwest of Charlton in Hertfordshire, lost her five-year-old brown tom Taz to a killer. "We (she and her neighbor Mark) just stood staring at the body," she related to the Daily Mail on September 29, 2018. "There was no blood, but his tail had been cleanly cut off and his front left paw had been flattened as though he'd been trapped in a vice. His back leg had been snapped and (one of ) his ear(s) had been cut off cleanly."
Like all of the owners interviewed by the Daily Mail and The Mirror, she does not believe for one moment Scotland Yard's and the RVC's claims that foxes were to blame for the mutilation of Taz. "There was no way he'd been in a fight," she concluded. "I'm annoyed that the police have come out with this rubbish about foxes."
In response to those criticisms, Henny Martineau of the RVC has countered by maintaining that foxes attack cats' heads and tails because they have weak jaws. "So they are going to target areas that are easy to remove," she swore to the New Scientist.
She also contends that the absence of blood on the cats' wounds can be explained by fox predation. "The mutilation occurred after the animal had died, so it would not be bleeding after death," she told the New Scientist.
Lovely Squiggles Was Killed and Mutilated in 2018 |
Some of her fellow veterinarians outside the RVC have not been so easily bamboozled, however. "We've had ten to fifteen cats come in to us over the past few years with no heads, no tails, and the wound has been incredibly clean," Nicola Bromley of Grove Lodge Vets in Worthing, West Sussex, testified to the Daily Mail on September 29, 2018. "The injuries are not consistent with a road traffic accident, where there would be scuffing, pelvic fractures and crush injuries. Nor are they consistent with foxes attacking or scavenging."
She then continued on to deliver a very different picture of animal predation than the one foisted upon the public by Martineau. "When an animal attacks or eats another, the wound is scruffy, there's a lot of chewing on the bone and contamination. With the bodies where the heads and tails are removed, you'd expect a fox to pull out the innards, but these animals don't seem to have that," she concluded. "These injuries are consistent with a blade being used. I can't see any logical answer to these deaths other than human involvement."
A spokesman for Streatham Hill Veterinary Surgery in the borough of Lambeth in southwest London concurred. "We have seen several of these bodies brought in to us. They have all consisted of clean, surgical-type amputations and beheadings," that individual told the Daily Mail on September 29, 2018. "They were not done by foxes or wild animals."
There is, of course, a world of difference between viewing the body of a recently killed and mutilated cat as opposed to a cadaver that has been refrigerated for either months or years. Likewise, veterinarians who have had years of experience examining the mutilated corpses of cats should be in a better position to more accurately evaluate them as opposed to the eggheads at the RVC and the dishonest dunces at Scotland Yard who not only are novices in this field of endeavor but, more importantly, are prejudiced against cats and their owners.
Tony Jenkins of SNARL has raised two additional areas of concern. First of all, he has pointed out that these atrocities have continued unabated during the pandemic. "There was no decrease in these killings in lockdown when there were less (sic) cars on the road," he told The Mirror. Secondly, he has noted that although there are motorists and foxes all over England, these killing and mutilations are occurring in predominantly south London.
Not surprisingly, Kevin Parsons of the University of Glasgow has a rejoinder to that. "Croydon is on the edge of London so it may be happening due to new interactions and encroachments," he told the New Scientist. "But it could also be that these are badly behaved foxes for the time being and such behaviors will eventually be selectively removed from the population as we remain in contact."
The Way They Were: Theo and Katherine Hughes |
Jenkins additionally has not only dismissed the RVC's findings but also called into question the integrity of them. "I don't think anyone really believes that foxes would cleanly remove the head and tail from a dead cat despite the rather inconclusive research published by the Royal Veterinary College a few months ago," he wrote September 14, 2022 on SNARL's Facebook page. "There is clearly something not right about the so-called authorities' investigations to these killings."
As to what that "something" possibly could be, an unidentified practitioner at Whiteley Village Vet Centre in Fareham, Hampshire, has an idea. "I feel that this is more to do with case-closing statistics than finding the truth," that individual theorized to the Daily Mail on September 29, 2018. "I'm very glad the case is still being privately investigated by SNARL as, until foxes learns to drive and handle scalpels and shears, they are not responsible."