Kitten in Newport Beach rescued with aid of jackhammer
Deepa Bharath
A little kitten in Newport Beach was lucky enough to use up only one
of his nine lives before a persistent rescuer pulled him to safety
last week.
He is alive because a woman walking her dog heard his “meow” and
Animal Control Officer Valerie McCulley was determined to save his
life, even if took six hours and several jackhammers.
The kitten was found early Friday morning in a narrow vent at an
apartment complex in the 4700 block of Villagio, said Newport Beach
Police Sgt. Steve Shulman.
“The property manager told us to do whatever was necessary to get
the kitten out,” he said.
McCulley got there at 6 a.m., she said.
“We didn’t know how he got there,” McCulley said. “He was just
five or six weeks old. And he’d been there for the last day or two.”
The problem was the hole in the vent was barely three inches wide
and it wasn’t big enough to get him out.
“I could put my hand in and feel his head but I couldn’t pull him
out,” McCulley said.
They tried offering him food, even the fancy Friskies type. But
the little kitten ate the food and couldn’t figure out a way to get
out.
So after an hour and a half of trying, she asked city General
Services for help and they arrived with jackhammers.
“We had to jackhammer for an hour and a half because it was so
loud and we didn’t want him to go deaf,” McCulley said.
Then she climbed into the vent and sat there waiting for the
kitten to come out.
“He did come out and when he did, I grabbed him,” she said.
McCulley said she and others working on the rescue and even
watching it, felt an immediate fondness for the distressed animal.
“He was so friendly,” she said. “I thought for sure he was missing
from someone’s home.”
The kitten was then taken to a shelter and was adopted right away
by the woman who had alerted the animal control officers, McCulley
said.
And since the little guy didn’t have a name, McCulley came up with
one she thought was perfect -- Jackhammer.
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