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		Fire kills a New York cat sanctuary founder and more than 100 rescued 
		felines
		[April 02, 2025]  
		By JULIE WALKER and PHILIP MARCELO 
		NEW YORK (AP) — A fire burned down a cat shelter in suburban New York, 
		killing its founder and more than 100 of the felines he rescued and 
		sparking a rescue operation for dozens of cats still roaming the 
		destroyed property.
 As many as 150 cats are believed to have survived Monday's blaze at 
		Happy Cat Sanctuary on Long Island, according to Roy Gross, chief of the 
		Suffolk County Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, which 
		is helping coordinate the recovery effort.
 
 Some of the surviving animals suffered burns and smoke inhalation and 
		have been taken to local animal hospitals for treatment, he said 
		Tuesday.
 
 Many of those in the house perished and others with significant injuries 
		have been euthanized while volunteers work to collect the survivors.
 
 “The whole place is burned down and there's cats right there on the 
		debris,” Gross said.
 
 In the coming days, the SPCA plans to deploy its mobile animal surgical 
		hospital, which it used to treat search-and-rescue dogs at ground zero 
		following the 9/11 terrorist attacks, to help triage rescued cats close 
		to the fire site, he said.
 
		
		 
		“This is going to be an ongoing situation to get all of these cats cared 
		for and placed in a proper facility," said Gross. "Just a major 
		undertaking after a tragic situation.”
 Owner Christopher Arsenault was found in a back room of the shelter, 
		which was located in the hamlet of Medford, more than 50 miles (80 
		kilometers) east of Manhattan.
 
 The property, which included outdoor buildings where cats were also 
		housed, remained cordoned off Tuesday as police and fire officials 
		returned to the charred site. Suffolk County police said the cause of 
		the blaze remains under investigation.
 
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            Chris Arsenault, is shown with one of nearly 300 cats he cared for 
			at his Happy Cat Sanctuary in Medford, N.Y., on Tuesday, Dec. 6, 
			2016. (James Carbone/Newsday via AP) 
            
			
			 
            Arsenault, 65, founded Happy Cat in 2006 after the death of his 
			24-year-old son, Eric, in a motorcycle accident, according to the 
			sanctuary's website. He described finding his calling when he came 
			across a colony of 30 sick kittens and nursed them back to health.
 Gross said Arsenault gave over much of the house to the cats, living 
			simply in a room with a bed, microwave and a small refrigerator.
 
 “Every dime he had he put into taking care of those cats,” he said. 
			“His life was the cats.”
 
 Gross acknowledged the shelter received its share of complaints, 
			given its location in a residential area.
 
 But SPCA staff visited the property around 10 times over the years 
			and found the animals were healthy, well-fed and receiving proper 
			care, he said.
 
 “He wasn't a hoarder. That's not the case here,” Gross said. “This 
			was a good man doing the right thing. He was a hero for what he was 
			doing.”
 
 Officials for the town of Brookhaven, where Medford is, told Newsday 
			Arsenault had removed an unsafe finished basement and was working to 
			bring the premises into compliance with building codes.
 
 In recent months, he had begun relocating some 60 to 80 cats to a 
			30-acre (12-hectare) farm in upstate New York where he was planning 
			to move, according to Gross and town officials.
 
 “Unfortunately, this disaster happened and now he’s gone,” Gross 
			said.
 
			
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