Cat survives 2 euthanasia attempts at Utah shelter

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A stray cat that survived two trips to a Utah animal shelter's gas chamber now has a new home.
Janita Coombs plays with her cat, Andrea, at her Syracuse, Utah home, on Sunday, Oct. 16. The Utah city may put an end to its gas chamber after Andrea survived a shelter’s two attempts to euthanize her. Animal shelter volunteers are expected to appear at a West Valley City Council meeting Tuesday evening to make the case for using lethal injections instead. Andrea had not been adopted for 30 days when shelter officials tried to put her to death in October. She survived, so they gassed her again. Shelter officials presumed she was dead when they put her in a plastic bag in a cooler. She was later found alive.
Janita Coombs plays with her cat, Andrea, at her Syracuse, Utah home, on Sunday, Oct. 16. The Utah city may put an end to its gas chamber after Andrea survived a shelter’s two attempts to euthanize her. Animal shelter volunteers are expected to appear at a West Valley City Council meeting Tuesday evening to make the case for using lethal injections instead. Andrea had not been adopted for 30 days when shelter officials tried to put her to death in October. She survived, so they gassed her again. Shelter officials presumed she was dead when they put her in a plastic bag in a cooler. She was later found alive. Djamila Grossman / AP

A stray cat that survived two trips to a Utah animal shelter's gas chamber now has a new home.

Officials at West Valley City's animal shelter in Utah say the cat named Andrea hadn't been adopted for 30 days when shelter officials tried to put her to death in October. She survived, so they gassed her again.

Shelter officials detected no vital signs and presumed she was dead after the second try, so they put her in a plastic bag in a cooler. But when they checked the bag, they saw she had vomited on herself and had hypothermia but was alive.

The shelter then decided to stop trying to kill her.

"It was just one of those things where they thought this cat obviously really wants to live," West Valley City spokesman Aaron Crim told the Salt Lake Tribune. "Let's give it a chance to find a permanent home."

The newspaper reports the cat has since been adopted and shelter officials are investigating why the gassing failed.

"She's pretty tough, obviously," Janita Coombs, a volunteer with the Community Animal Welfare Society who agreed to take care of Andrea told The Tribune. "She's definitely got some will to live."

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