Montreal

Montreal police indifferent to catnapping, Blacky's owners complain

Robert Bernabei, who lives in Montreal's Villeray neighbourhood, filed a report and brought footage from his security camera to police, but he says they didn't spend enough time pursuing his case.

Stolen pets lost among Montreal police's 27,000 annual theft reports

The Bernabei family's 8-year-old, nine-kilogram cat, Blacky, was taken around 3 a.m. Nov. 24. (Submitted by Robert Bernabei)

The Bernabei family is used to having items stolen from around their home  — pots, rakes, even the family vehicle — but when one of their cats was stolen from their front balcony last week, they demanded police intervene.

Robert Bernabei, who lives in Montreal's Villeray neighbourhood, filed a report and brought footage from his security camera to police, but he says they didn't spend enough time pursuing his case.

"People are saying, 'Rob, you're making a big deal about a cat,'" Bernabei told CBC News.

"I have three kids. Am I going to have to tie my kids to the house with a rope when they're playing outside?"

When someone files a report with Montreal police that their pet has been stolen, it's classified as a theft under $5,000.

Montreal police said there were about 27,000 reports of theft filed in 2015.

There's no special classification beyond property theft for a stolen pet, despite animals being recognized as sentient beings in Quebec in 2015.

Catnapping caught on security video

The Bernabeis' cat, Blacky, was taken around 3 a.m. last Thursday, Nov. 24.

The family saw exactly what happened on their home security camera footage.

Footage from the Bernabei family security camera shows someone taking Blacky early Thursday morning. (courtesy Robert Bernabei)
Around 2:45 a.m., a vehicle which appears to be a black SUV pulled up in front of their home, and someone got out and rang the Bernabeis' doorbell.

That woman picked up the cat and brought it into her vehicle. The pair in the vehicle waited for about 15 minutes before throwing Blacky's collar out the window, then ejecting the cat from the vehicle before driving off.

The same vehicle came back some time later. The woman got out and picked up the cat a second time. This time, they left with the cat.

Bernabei filed a police report and told police the building next door has state-of-the-art security equipment which would be able to zoom in on the vehicle's licence plate number.

"Police were sent to go see [the other building's] camera, but they really didn't stay long. They stayed maybe two minutes," Bernabei said.

"They came back out and said, 'We don't see anything.'"

'Cat-flipping' and concerned animal lovers

Suzanne Kleinburg from the foster care group Team Cat Rescue, based in southern Ontario, has had foster cats stolen and says it's best to turn to the public for help in these cases.

According to Kleinburg, Bernabei's case is not uncommon.

"Recently a cat was stolen from a store, and he was found a few days later on Kijiji," Kleinburg said.

"People flip cats and dogs all the time, and they make money. It's a very quick, very easy thing to do."

Blacky the cat belonged to the family's middle daughter, Bianca. (submitted by Robert Bernabei )
Because the person who took Blacky rang the doorbell first, Kleinburg suspects that maybe this is the case of an animal-lover overstepping her bounds.

"With outdoor cats, people will take them, or they'll get lost, or people will assume that the owner doesn't deserve them," Kleinburg said.

She suspects the person who took Blacky may have seen him outside before.

In cases where pets are stolen, it's usually due to a lack of supervision, said the SPCA's Anita Kapuscinska. 

She recommends not leaving animals outside — such as dogs tied up outside while doing errands.

As the temperature dips, anyone who sees an animal outside and suspects abuse should contact the SPCA and "go about it the right way if they think an animal is being mistreated," Kapuscinska said.

How to find a missing pet

The Bernabei family has been circulating their cat's missing poster on social media. (courtesy Robert Bernabei)

Kleinburg suggests that anyone whose pet has gone missing should print "missing" posters to put around the neighbourhood and also email those posters to vets.

She also recommended handing out the missing pet poster to children in the neighbourhood, offering them a reward if they find the animal.

"If there's a reward, kids will find a cat," she said.