An unknown animal attacker captured or trapped a Cheyenne family's cat last week, riddled him with 19 airsoft pellets and left him to bleed and cry more than 2 miles from home. Â
âWhoever it was (who) shot him, seriously injured but didnât kill him, and left him there to suffer and die,â Janice Lee, the catâs owner, told Cowboy State Daily on Thursday. âThat shows me someone is enjoying the torture part of it.â Â
In her own Thursday interview, Cheyenne Animal Control Officer Kelly Nguyen agreed that the case evidence suggests the motive for the attack was torture. She called it âhorrifying.â Â
Walter is a 4-year-old grey shorthair. He was found bleeding and injured around the Greenway near Rawlins Street in Cheyenne, which is 2 miles from his home. Two miles is outside typical cat roaming distance, Lee noted. Â
He went missing last Friday, and Lee said she and her family searched for him. Â
âWe looked for him squashed in the street. We thought maybe a fox had gotten him,â said Lee. âIt never occurred to me maybe someone took him and trapped him and tortured him.â
Here, Kitty-Kitty
Walter is extremely friendly. Both Lee and Nguyen said it wouldn't take much for someone to grab him.
âProbably someone just said âhere, kitty-kitty,â and he probably went right on over,â said Lee. Â
Lee said the concentration of 19 pellets on his face, including one that struck and ruined his left eye, suggest that Walter was trapped during the shooting. Â
People will shoot nuisance cats on their land with the occasional pellet, said Nguyen. But itâs rare to find a cat with 19 pellets in its body. Â
Nguyen said sheâs grateful for the woman who called in the cat as injured. The woman stayed with Walter while waiting for animal control, and said she would adopt him if no one came for him. Â
The Cheyenne Animal Shelter took charge of the cat after that, performed an X-ray on him and discovered the pellets. Â
Lee didnât recognize Walter when he first showed up on the shelterâs online page, she said, so it took her a while to connect the dots. She got Walter back Monday, and heâs home now recovering. Â
But a veterinarian told Lee that it would be unsafe to take the pellets out of Walterâs body. Heâll live out the rest of his life with the ammunition still inside of him, she said. Â
Others?Â
Nguyen noted sheâd seen social media chatter suggesting this wasnât the first recent occurrence of cat torture in Cheyenne, but itâs the only one reported to Cheyenne Animal Control in at least the past two years. Â
Lee said she saw two posts on a ring neighborhood, which is a regional social media forum. Â
In one of those posts, a resident said a local cat had sustained 19 shots to the face with a pellet gun, but 37 more pellets littered the area. The concentration of shots suggested that the cat was trapped or caged during the shooting, the post says. Â
âThis isnât a prank,â said Lee of Walterâs incident and the other incident from the post. âTwo cats were seriously injured. The person is not going to stop until theyâre caught.â Â
Lee called out for Cheyenne residents to band together on social media to find the torturer, and to address troubling signposts of mental illness. Â
âResearch shows that people who torture animals move on to hurting people,â she said. âI think thatâs really important (to note), because sometimes people think âboys will be boys,â or âkids will be kids.â And this is not that.â Â
Someone KnowsÂ
In her own social media post, Lee said someone is hunting and torturing cats, and is likely to do it again. Â
âSOMEONE. KNOWS. WHO. THIS IS,â Lee emphasized in the post. Â
Finding someone who knows who the shooter could be is going to be Nguyenâs best chance at a breakthrough in the investigation at this point, the officer told Cowboy State Daily. Â
A neighbor in the area said she heard a commotion Friday morning, like screaming, Nguyen recalled. Â
âWhen cats scream they sound like children screaming,â she added. âIt might have happened right there.âÂ
Unfortunately, that resident does not have cameras. Â
While the report of screaming was âsomething,â it doesnât lend a lot of investigative headway: coyotes also roam that area, Nguyen noted. Â
Get HelpÂ
Leeâs post encourages the suspect, if he or she is reading it, to seek help. Â
âIf your child has a pellet gun, ask who he/she shoots with,â the post continues. âIf they seem uneasy, question further and call Animal Control if they know something.âÂ
People and their children should stay attuned to âgossip about thisâ and should call Animal Control with any concerns, Lee wrote. Â
âAnimal cruelty is heartbreaking. AND A CRIME,â the post reads. âPlease help find whoever did this as their mental health is in crisis.â Â
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.




