A man from southern California was accused of harsh felony after he was claimed that he used food to attract and kill multiple cats for months.
Prosecutors said that Alejandro Olivos Acosta, 46, from Santa Anna, is scheduled to be called on Wednesday for also included the stealing of an accompanying animal, and prosecutors from Bengal claiming to be attracted and stolen, and possessing metamphine.
It was not clear whether he had kept a lawyer for this case. The Aurang County Public Inquiry offices did not respond to the suspension request on Tuesday night.
Orange County Public Prosecutor’s Office said in a statement on Tuesday that Olivos was arrested on April 24, and the investigations by the police in Santa Anna and Tamstster were released and was released on a bail of $ 40,000.
The authorities said that reports of a man attracting cats with canned foods and killing them by beating them or Al -Dus began in the neighborhood of Olivos and other Central Orange County communities in late last year and continued to reach the spring.
Santa Anna police said in a statement that the Santa Anna and Westumestter police stations were beaten on Olivos after the witnesses knew him as a suspect in crimes against cats, and a search for his home on April 23 led to evidence that he had attacks.

DA and the police also referred to multiple incidents in which witnesses described the Whiteota Toyota Toyota used by the suspect.
According to the DA statement on Tuesday, it is claimed that the crimes associated with the defendant include the deadly trample on April 5 of a cat taken on the security video; April 3 report on a man carrying a cat on his head and transferring it; And the March 21 report for an accompanying animal, a Bengal Linux, was stolen after he was seduced by a man with a box of food that was using a Whitea -Tacoma white pickup.
The authorities said that this cat, called Clubber, eventually returned to its owner.
“Between November and April, seven reports were informed of dead and wounded cats to Santa Anna to control animals, including animals that suffer from their broken backs and bloody faces.”
On April 27, the city police said in a statement that some of the residents who attended the night of Santa Anna Figil urged justice on this issue, became map and threw things.
“While we support the right of society to assemble in peace, the Santa Anna Police Administration will not tolerate violence, sabotage, or any threats to public safety,” she said.
Olivos was able to stay free amid the ongoing investigation, and the case has angered some animal defenders. On Tuesday, the provincial prosecutor’s office said that he would seek to obtain a much higher bail, on the pretext that Olivos pose a threat to the public.
DA office said that the defendant is facing the possibility of more than five years behind bars if he was convicted of all charges.
Santa Anna, the headquarters of Orange County, is located about 33 miles southeast in downtown Los Angeles.