Missing Cat Turns up 3 Years After California Disaster

The Associated Press
By The Associated Press
January 25, 2021Trending
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Missing Cat Turns up 3 Years After California Disaster
Patches who had been missing since Jan. 9, 2018, and believed killed along with her owner in the Montecito debris flow disaster is seen at the Animal Shelter Assistance Program in Santa Barbara, Calif., on Dec. 31, 2020. (Jillian Title/Animal Shelter Assistance Program via AP)

SANTA BARBARA, Calif.—A pet cat believed killed along with her owner in a huge mudslide has been found three years later.

The Animal Shelter Assistance Program in Santa Barbara County says the calico named Patches was brought in as a stray last month and a microchip scan revealed her identity.

missing-patches
Patches is reunited with Norm Borgatello at the Animal Shelter Assistance Program in Santa Barbara County, Calif., on Dec. 31, 2020. (Jillian Title/Animal Shelter Assistance Program via AP)

Patches had been missing since Jan. 9, 2018, when a rainstorm on the vast burn scar of the Thomas Fire sent a debris-laden torrent crashing down through hillside neighborhoods of Montecito, northwest of Los Angeles.

Twenty-three people were killed, including cat owner Josie Gower. The devastation of the debris flow was so terrible that the bodies of two victims were never found.

The ASAP shelter says Patches was found less than a quarter-mile from where her Montecito home stood.

She was reunited with Gower’s partner, Norm Borgatello, on New Year’s Eve.

Patches is reunited with Norm Borgatello
Patches is reunited with Norm Borgatello at the Animal Shelter Assistance Program in Santa Barbara County, Calif., on Dec. 31, 2020. (Jillian Title/Animal Shelter Assistance Program via AP)

“Though we don’t know exactly what she’s been doing with her life for the past three years, we can see that both Patches and Norm are thrilled to be reunited,” the shelter said in a Facebook post.

A livestream ceremony to remember the 23 victims was held on the third anniversary of what has become known as the “1/9 Debris Flow.”

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