Logan boy's letter: 'Grown-ups killed my kitty'


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Updated: 10/10/2012 11:09 am | Published: 10/10/2012 10:11 am
LOGAN (AP) - An 8-year-old Utah boy wrote a letter to his local newspaper after an animal shelter worker failed to write a note to save his cat from being euthanized. "Yesterday grown-ups killed my kitty, my best friend, when they weren't supposed to," he said.

The letter appeared in The Herald Journal, of Logan, on Thursday. By Friday, it had received the fourth-most comments on the newspaper's website - behind three letters about Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney.

Some berated the shelter for failing to keep the cat safe. Others criticized the family for letting the cat outside, failing to have it on a leash or not looking for the cat at the shelter sooner. Still others faulted the neighbors who had trapped the cat and denied having seen it when asked.

But the boy, Rayden Sazama, just wanted to share his love of his cat, Toothless.

"I just wanted to tell people about Toothless - that I loved him," he told The Associated Press through his father, Jason Sazama, on Friday. "And that people shouldn't lie."

Sazama said he's surprised how many people didn't get the point of Rayden's letter, which the boy dictated to his grandfather: "It was about a boy sharing his love for his cat - and saying, `C'mon grown-ups.'"

Toothless, a fluffy, black cat who roamed the cow pasture next door and often brought home "presents" of field mice, slipped out his kitty door Sept. 28 and didn't return home. By Sunday, Rayden and his younger brother, Devin, were going door to door, asking neighbors if they had seen the cat.

Everyone said they hadn't seen Toothless.

Jason Sazama checked the Cache Humane Society's website but didn't see any photos resembling Toothless. After two busy days on the road for work, he decided to swing by the organization's shelter Tuesday to see if Toothless had turned up.

The shelter had already closed for the evening, but a worker allowed Sazama inside, where Toothless sat in a cage. There was just one problem: Sazama still needed to pay the impound fee at a government building that was also closed.

The worker assured Sazama the cat would be fine, and he returned home, crowing: "I found Toothless! We'll get him tomorrow."

But when Sazama returned the next day, the receipt for his impound payment in hand, he discovered that Toothless had already been euthanized. The worker had forgotten to put a note on the cage.

The Cache Humane Society did not return a telephone message Friday from the AP. When reached by The Herald Journal, Director Brenda Smith confirmed Rayden's story, saying the boy's father had visited the shelter after business hours, when the worker was busy training another employee.

"She let him in to look for the cat, but unfortunately, in training someone she forgot to leave a note on the cat's cage," Smith told the newspaper. "I've just been sick about it, and so has she."

Sazama said he has no ill will toward the shelter.

"I had to explain to my son that several adults made mistakes here," he said. "The worker made a mistake, and I should have gone to the shelter sooner."

Sazama said he even understood why the neighbors trapped the cat; he hadn't known that Toothless had been visiting the neighbors' sandbox and leaving different kinds of presents there.

But Rayden said in his letter that the neighbors lied when he asked them if they had seen the cat. "My dad and mom tell me and Devin not to lie and that is right," he said.

"Now I don't know what to do," the letter concludes. "My cat Toothless is dead; the people that killed him didn't even give him to my dad so we could bury him. What do I do now?"
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Jessie - 11/8/2012 12:07 PM
0 Votes
I was truly saddened to hear about poor Toothless and the little boy who loved him and lost him in such a tragic way. It is hard to understand how neighbor could be so cruel. And how a 'animal shelter' employee could be so careless. I hope when, and if, they ever get another cat they put a chip in him so this horrible event cannot be repeated. I wish all the shelters could be 'no-kill' also....so this heartbreaking chain of events would never happen. Jessie Maybe this 'animal shelter' woman should look for another job... And the neighbor should be fined. They murdered Toothless.

jeanie - 10/15/2012 2:49 AM
0 Votes
If anything the shelter should at least offer to replace the cat at no cost, and let him pick it out after all we are talking about an 8 year old child who just lost his pet out of no fault of his own. There are so many animals that need homes, good homes so why not save another cat from the fate that toothless faced and died from. Everyone tried to do the right thing here with the exception of the lying neighbor who should have been honest from the get go. Shame on the neighbor for that.

suzannege - 10/12/2012 11:07 AM
0 Votes
I realize everybody makes mistakes, but seriously, this was a mistake that NEVER should have been made. I don't care if the person responsible to put a note on the cage was busy training someone or not, she should have stopped right then and made sure that note was securely attached. I suppose to shelter workers and non-animal lovers it's easy enough to say "I'm sorry" and move on. But an "I'm sorry" to a little boy who just lost his beloved cat, his best friend, is just not enough. Unfortunately there is NO remedy to this situation - the cat is dead! Someone needs to be fired at the very least!

KL Gilbert - 10/10/2012 3:59 PM
0 Votes
Although this was in the 10/6/12 "Post Register" (Idaho Falls, ID), I'd like to know if there had been any follow-up with this young man. To me, a verbal apology is simply not adequate. This young man should have the grown-ups demonstrate they truly are sorry for their negligence. Let's not get a kid started with anger at such a young age.
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