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Fat Pets

WhistlingJack

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44-pound cat abandoned after foreclosure

Published: July 31, 2008 at 7:56 PM

BLACKWOOD, N.J., July 31 (UPI) -- New Jersey authorities said they have found the owner of a 44-pound cat that was nicknamed Princess Chunk by animal shelter volunteers.

Authorities said an elderly woman abandoned the cat on the streets of Voorhees, N.J., after her home was foreclosed, the New York Daily News reported Thursday.

A veterinarian appearing on TV's "Live with Regis and Kelly" made another shocking announcement about the princess -- she's actually a prince.

The cat's original owner said she named him Powder.

Camden County Animal Shelter volunteer Deborah Wright, who has been caring for the cat since it arrived at the shelter Saturday, said hundreds of cat lovers have already offered to adopt the corpulent cat, who is only two pounds short of the world record for fattest cat.

However, Wright said Powder is unlikely to reach the record, as he has been put on a diet.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc.
August 8, 2008

44-pound feline Prince Chunk gets new home in NJ

New Jersey's fat cat has a home. A family in southern New Jersey will get the 44-pound "Prince Chunk" next week, according to the Camden County Animal Shelter. The shelter won't disclose the family's identity.


About 500 people applied to adopt the 10-year-old cat found lumbering around Voorhees after his owner lost her home to foreclosure.

Catherine Harr, president of the animal shelter's board, said the cat's new family is a couple with a teenage child. She said they are building a castle to go over Prince Chunk's litter box.

The adoption comes after a vet gave the cat a clean bill of health — other than his large weight.

Harr said the couple was chosen because they have past experience with cats, and their finances are stable — unlike the cat's former owner.

Prince Chunk received national attention when he was found, including an appearance on "Live with Regis & Kelly." The attention was so intense that shelter officials last Sunday had to sneak the cat out of a foster home and move him to another foster family, Harr said.

Thousands of people from as far away as London and California called to inquire about adopting the cat, Harr said. Unfortunately, she said no one who contacted the shelter was interested in adopting any of the more than 200 other cats and kittens in the shelter's care.

The shelter had to euthanize about 1,000 unwanted cats last year, about a third of the cats it took in, she said.

© 2008 The Associated Press.
 
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