Wellington, New Zealand (AP) – Most Cat The owners bring their pets to the mice or birds of the house. But for the owners of a hooligan Cat -like In Auckland, New ZealandA worse is a shame-being unable to be unknown to one-Kat Crimewave.
Merrangi Bay’s Placids Bedside Pinning in the neighborhood and her abundance from the bedroom was washing the 15 -month -old Leo into a local celebrity and earned them a new monicor. He now goes by Leonardo da Pinch.
And he has got expensive taste. Their frequent halls include silk boxer shorts, socks of thick men’s work-evenly clothing is still engaged-and in a mortering episode for their humans, a brand-new 300 New Zealand dollars ($ 181) Kashmiri sweater.
Leo owner Helen North said, “My daughter was ill at home and she told me at work,” It’s bad, it’s bad, this is the worst thing that he has brought, it’s really bad. ” “Because it was beautiful. I was so, ‘Ooh, can I keep it?” But I could not. ,
Instead, North turned to a neighborhood WhatsApp group to return his right owners to return Leo’s stolen goods. His general message: “Are these you undesirable?”
But Pilfard Stash piled: socks (piles), underwear (load) and even a 5-foot long stuffed snake (bizarre). On a record-setting day, Leo returned with nine items, enough for a full dress if you did not have a mixture of everything from baby cloth to menwear.
“He brought 10 past 8 in a jersey this morning,” said Uttar. “Shops were also not open.”
With dozens of unclaimed objects, the embarrassed owner made his discovery for the victims of Leo this month, posing pictures of his halls on a local Facebook page and his halls at his address. Those who showed to claim their belongings included a woman who recognized her pink and purple underpants and a boy whose favorite and missing sports jersey was identified with her name in her name.
Ere North did not expect Leo’s cat’s cataluting antex – although a goal of her, which is allergic to cats, now dries inside her laundry house.
“All our neighbors think he is amazing,” he said. “Some of them are quite out that he has not really stolen anything about him.”
Nevertheless, North has tried to do everything to stop his cat’s clothes washing passion, tried to keep him out of the house to steal him to go out at home to leave clothes at home. No luck.
“He only wants goods that he should not have,” he said, saying that he was also reluctant to risk an online suggestion that Leo just needed another playmet.
“He can teach another cat to do so,” said North.
Leo’s life of crime began when she was allowed to go out a year ago for the first time. But his family hopes that this is just a teenage stage.
“I hope he grows out of it because I don’t want to do this, for 15 years,” North said. “It is a lot of administrator.”
For now, on the streets of the Maranrangi Bay, Leonardo da Pinch lives on a large scale.
Charlotte Graham-Mack, Associated Press