STAMFORD HILL, GREATER LONDON, UK - One of the poor animals was found dead just hours after the incident.
Theresa Rhodes, 24, says she was given just three days to remove the pets from her Stamford Hill home, but on Monday last week she discovered them on the roof outside her bedroom window.
She claims her bed and carpets had also been thrown out and all the wires on her electrical appliances had been cut.
A “hysterical” Ms Rhodes turned to east London’s Celia Hammond Animal Trust for help, and Ms Hammond arrived to rescue the remaining cats.
Ms Hammond took the youngest cats – which she says were in a “terrible state” – to her shelter while Theresa, a care worker, spent the next day seeking help from the Citizens Advice Bureau.
But when she returned home, she found the cats outside once again – and one of them, Miracle, was dead, despite having been perfectly healthy the night before.
“I was hysterical,” said Ms Rhodes, now staying with family. “When I saw Miracle I was desperately trying to break the window but I couldn’t.
“I’ve been violated and treated like a piece of rubbish.”
Ms Rhodes was not allowed to keep pets under her tenancy agreement, she admits, and said her landlord had indeed ordered her to get rid of them.
She originally had not planned to keep 10 cats, but “fell in love” with two successive litters, she added.
Police were called but determined “no crime had been committed.”
Ms. Hammond again returned to the flat.
“We are now in the process of removing all Theresa’s remaining cats,” she said. “This has further upset her as these cats are her only companions. The landlord is within his rights to enforce his ‘no pets’ rule, but he cannot put the lives of her cats at risk.”
The landlord told the Gazette planned renovation work was being carried out and all the carpets and the bed were set to be replaced. He said the cats were let outside while the room was fumigated and the locks were merely a “temporary measure.”












