
Target: Clayton M. Fuller, District Attorney, Catoosa County, Georgia
Goal: Secure the maximum felony sentences, court-ordered mental-health evaluation, and permanent animal-ownership ban for the pair reportedly responsible for the mass neglect and deaths of cats and kittens.
Dozens of cats and newborn kittens were reportedly discovered crammed inside a trash-packed house saturated with ammonia fumes and animal waste. Officers in full hazmat suits purportedly waded through knee-high piles of garbage to find emaciated cats, in-bred litters, and multiple kitten corpses both inside the residence and strewn across the porch. According to investigators, not a scrap of edible food could be located—only empty bags and a single unopened sack left in a car.
The suspects, a man and woman now facing multiple aggravated animal-cruelty counts, allegedly allowed the animals to breed unchecked while denying them the most basic necessities of food, water, and veterinary care. Officials say the conditions were so toxic that the property was condemned and the surviving animals, ravaged by disease and starvation, had to be euthanized to end their suffering.
Such apparent, prolonged torment cannot be dismissed as mere “neglect.” Meaningful justice is vital—both to honor the lives lost and to deter future acts of extreme cruelty. Robust sentencing, professional psychological intervention, and a lifetime prohibition on keeping animals are imperative to prevent additional tragedy.
PETITION LETTER:
Dear District Attorney Fuller,
Reports indicate that law-enforcement officers wearing hazmat gear entered a Saunders Road residence and uncovered an unthinkable scene: cats and kittens starving amid heaps of trash, pools of urine, and lethal ammonia levels. Investigators purportedly documented in-breeding, skeletal bodies, and kitten corpses scattered inside and outside the home. The animals’ suffering was reportedly so profound that even those rescued alive were ultimately euthanized.
Courts have consistently recognized that aggravated animal cruelty is not a victimless offense. Allowing dozens of sentient beings to languish without food, clean water, or medical attention—while they slowly waste away among dead siblings—constitutes a particularly heinous crime. Society relies on your office to ensure that such reported acts receive punishment proportional to their severity.
We therefore urge you to pursue the maximum penalties permitted under Georgia law, to request comprehensive psychological evaluations for the defendants, and to seek a lifelong ban on pet ownership. Anything less risks diminishing the value of the many lives reportedly lost in that condemned house.
Sincerely,
[Your Name Here]
Photo credit: Howcheng