When Olivia went missing from her Cohasset, Minn., home one night in late September, it was storming so hard no one could say for sure if they heard gunshots.
All Pam Dowell knows is that one day she woke up and three cats were missing — her treasured pet Olivia, a feral cat named Emerald that slept at her house, and her neighbor's cat, Pumpkin.
When local authorities initially dismissed the issue of the missing pets, Dowell, once a cop, and her neighbors turned into part-time sleuths, recording another neighbor who frequently talked about how much he "hated cats" and boasted that "if a cat ever comes in my yard, I'll shoot it."
The mystery of what became of the cats has turned into a small-town drama about property rights, unleashed pets and civility. It's led to felony charges of animal cruelty and a subsequent backlash against Dowell and her neighbors, who also lost a cat. Dowell was so harassed on social media, she obtained a restraining order against the sister of the man charged with killing her cat, Steven Lee Mishow.
It's just a cat.
Dowell has heard versions of the phrase and similar sentiments ever since Olivia stopped coming home.
To Dowell, Olivia was much more than a cat — she was family. She often slept under the covers in Dowell's bed, and she loved her nightly treat of a pat of butter in a bowl of milk. Olivia also loved to play outside with her neighbor's cat, Pumpkin, whose hair was trimmed to make her look like a tiny lion. Both cats were fixed and declawed, trained to use litter boxes but allowed to play outdoors in the yard.
Concerned about Mishow's avowed hatred of cats, Dowell said she even invited him into her home and begged him, "please don't harm my pets."