At first they blamed absent-mindedness for the spate of missing keys but when
ever more sets disappeared residents realised other forces were at work. Then they discovered the culprit, a genuine “cat burglar” who had made off
with more than 20 sets of house and car keys. The neighbours discovered that Milo the neighbourhood moggy was stealing the
keys – attached to his magnetic collar.
The nine-year-old cat had been fitted with the collar to operate her cat flap
and stop other cats sneaking into her home to steal her food. But the collar was also picking up the keys along with its adventures to
other people’s homes. It was not until Kirsten Alexander, 27, spotted her pet coming through the
cat flap with a set of someone else's keys dangling from her magnetic collar
that the mystery was solved.
In the past five weeks, Milo's collar picked up at more than 20 sets house
and car keys as she wandered from home to home through neighbour's catflaps in
Stoke Newington, north east London. Miss Alexander said: "I put a magnetic cat flap to stop other cats coming in
to steal Milo's food, but I had no idea what she was getting up to all day when
I was at work. Obviously she likes roaming around and sneaking into other people's homes
and it just so happens that her magnetic collar kept picking up people's spare
keys."
She found 12 sets of keys in her back garden and eight dotted around her home
– as well as another six sets which were found in neighbour's gardens after they
dropped off Milo's collar as she prowled through their gardens. She said she had also found dozens of metal items scattered around her house,
including nails, pins, screws and bolts. When I saw her coming through the cat flap with a set of keys round her neck
I thought 'poor thing' because her neck was really weighed down, and then it
dawned on me what was happening,” she said. "I've given all the keys back and luckily neighbours have seen the funny side
of it."
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