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    Wednesday, March 29, 2006

    Feline Prozac: Meet Lewis, the Crazy Cat. How crazy is he? So crazy, there's a restraining order out against him:

    "I was walking along the sidewalk when he sprang at me. I never saw it coming, but that's how it often is. He comes at you from behind, springs and wraps himself around your legs, biting and scratching," she said. "The last time I had three bites and eight scratches and I ended up at the walk-in clinic.

    "The Avon lady was getting out of her car when Lewis attacked her from behind," Kettman said. "She ended up going to the hospital."

    ... At first, the restraining order allowed the cat limited freedom if Cisero gave him Prozac. But the cat refused to take the drug, Cisero said. And it got out of the house and attacked another neighbor, Maureen Bachtig, according to police.

    "I felt Lewis' claw on my left leg and I shook him loose, he then lunged and clung to my right leg, leaving one very deep puncture wound, one long deep gash across the top of my knee," Bachtig told police.

    .... "The neighborhood is afraid of this cat," Bachtig said. "Lewis will stare you down, and you never know how he will react."


    Evidently, the cat's on an avenging crusade. His owner says his behavior began after he was egged and sprayed with a hose by neighbors. How did he know to avoid the Prozac?
     

    posted by Sydney on 3/29/2006 02:21:00 PM 1 comments

    1 Comments:

    Lewis just needs Advantage flea control. He's probably literally gone buggy. If he isn't on it, his owners need to try it. It will turn a feisty cat from Mr. Hyde back to a sweet little Dr. Jeckyll. You would be buggy too if you couldn't sleep due to ear mites and fleas.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 4:15 PM  

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