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Simpson's ex-girlfriend cited in cat's starvation death
The Sacromento Bee ^ | 11 July 2002

Posted on 07/12/2002 5:35:45 AM PDT by Lonesome in Massachussets

Edited on 04/12/2004 5:40:45 PM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]

MIAMI (AP) - O.J. Simpson's ex-girlfriend has been charged with animal cruelty in the starvation death of her pet cat, who stayed home alone while she was out of town for about a month.

Christie Prody was fined $500 on a civil cruelty charge after the cat's decomposed body was found in her Miami apartment in January. But she was served with a summons Tuesday on a more serious misdemeanor criminal charge.


(Excerpt) Read more at sacbee.com ...


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Free Republic; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Political Humor/Cartoons
KEYWORDS: cat; deadcat; ojsimpson
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Just another dead cat story. A cheerful diversion from cyrogenic sluggers and pedophile priests.

Hey, if I'm going to be gone more than a week or two, I arrange for someone to feed the cats.

1 posted on 07/12/2002 5:35:45 AM PDT by Lonesome in Massachussets
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To: Lonesome in Massachussets
The criminal charge carries a maximum possible sentence of a year in jail and a $5,000 fine.

Here's hoping she gets the max.

2 posted on 07/12/2002 5:37:54 AM PDT by neutrino
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To: Lonesome in Massachussets
Any woman who dates OJ has a death wish; I guess this one just projected that wish onto her own cat...Sick.

3 posted on 07/12/2002 5:41:49 AM PDT by hellinahandcart
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To: hellinahandcart
EDITH BOUVIER BEALE


JANUARY 24, 2002
THE EAST HAMPTON STAR
by Sheridan Sansegundo


Peering through the banisters of a staircase, the camera fixes its eye on Edith Bouvier Beale as she dances alone in the front hall of Grey Gardens, a 28-room house near the ocean in East Hampton. She is wearing black fishnet stockings and white high heels, with a pair of tights secured around her head with a jeweled pin. She is not young.

Upstairs, her mother lies on a bed strewn with newspapers, eating liver pate from a can with a knife. She sings "Tea for Two" in a quavering but sweet voice. Cats prowl the rooms. A raccoon plays a cameo role, sneaking through a hole in the decaying wainscot to grab a slice of white bread from the floor.

Perhaps it wasn't the starring role that Little Edie, who died on Jan. 13 in Miami Beach, had in mind, it being her conviction that only a series of mishaps had kept her from the stage, but her role in the classic Maysles brothers documentary "Grey Gardens" was certainly fame of a kind.

It would be hard to say which of the two, who squabble and fantasize and free associate their way through the film, was more beautiful as a young woman, Little Edie (or Body Beautiful Beale, as she was said to have been known at the Maidstone Club) or her mother, Big Edie, a member of the aristocratic Catholic Bouvier family and an aunt of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and her sister, Lee Radziwill. Photographs show them as society beauties, immaculately dressed, fashionable, and elegant.

In both their cases, however, a certain acceptable eccentricity became something more. Phelan Beale, Edith Bouvier's husband and Miss Beale's father, became increasingly disturbed by his wife's devotion to singing, wearing plus fours to the Maidstone Club, and saying things he thought outrageous. He eventually left her.

She raised Miss Beale and two younger boys, Phelan and Bouvier Beale, at Grey Gardens, on the corner of Lily Pond Lane and West End Road in the village. The brothers, both now deceased, moved on, but Little Edie, who graduated from Miss Porter's School in Farmington, Conn., and spent a short time in New York hoping to be a dancer, returned to live with her mother. She was in her early 30s at the time, having been born in November 1917.

With only a small allowance for child support from Mr. Beale and her own money running out, Mrs. Beale's circumstances declined. Servants left, and the two women led an increasingly lonely life in the decaying mansion, which became the talk of the town.

In 1971 the Suffolk County Health Department raided the house several times and issued an eviction notice, declaring it unfit for human habitation and citing illness among some of the 58 cats, piles of cat feces, heaps of empty cans and garbage in the house, holes in the roof, exposed wiring, no functioning toilets, and running water only in the kitchen sink. Little Edie claimed the raids were prompted by "relatives" or unknown persons interested in real estate.

Mrs. Beale, who refused to leave and filed a million-dollar invasion-of-privacy suit in return, was saved by her nieces, or, more specifically, Aristotle Onassis, who had married Mrs. Kennedy. He paid $32,000 to clean up the house and overgrown grounds and install a new furnace and plumbing system. It took over 1,000 large bags to contain all the garbage from the house. The story made headlines almost everywhere.

Mrs. Radziwill was inadvertently responsible for the "Grey Gardens" documentary. She had called Albert and David Maysles with an idea of making a film about her childhood and the set of upper-class families who summered in East Hampton. Agreeing, the Maysles eventually showed Mrs. Radziwill an hour and a half of footage, mainly of her eccentric aunt and cousin, which she confiscated immediately. They had, however, won the Beales' confidence and were invited back.

By 1974, when the film was made, the house was almost as bad as it had been before the renovation - it was so infested with fleas that the Maysles brothers wore flea collars around their ankles. But the Beales, bound together by mutual dependence and recrimination, eagerly unleashed 20 years of pent-up self-statement in scenes that provided one of the most complete descriptions of a relationship ever captured on film. The Maysles were to explain that both women had yearned to be performers and welcomed the opportunity.

"Grey Gardens" quickly became a cult classic, in part because of Little Edie's costumes, which, as recently as 1997, inspired an eight-page layout in Harper's Bazaar. Aware that what she wore was unusual, in the film she describes the best way to dress for daytime. For the most part, she wrapped sweaters around her waist as skirts and also covered her head with sweaters, the sleeves flowing down her back. Perry Ellis and Todd Oldham were among her fans and gave "Grey Gardens" fancy dress parties.

Some reviewers cried exploitation, but while the movie creates the feeling of voyeurism, the Beales themselves professed to be delighted. Most of the time. Little Edie said she was objective. "I said to myself, now who is this girl? She's odd and she dances. But the rest of the time it seems to me she's a disappointed dame. That was the fourth time. The second time I cried and cried."

In an interview with Katharine Graham, the publisher of The Washington Post, Miss Beale said that her brothers and cousins refused to see the movie, although how she would have known that is unknown.

Her mother died in February 1977 as a result of a fall when one of the wheels of her mobile commode fell off. Little Edie lived in the house for about two years, as her mother, who was always dominant, had told her to do, and then moved to Southampton. Shortly afterward, she got her chance in cabaret, appearing for eight nights at Reno Sweeney, a Manhattan night spot.

Although she saw it as her long-deserved breakthrough, this time the critics came down almost unanimously on the side of exploitation. The club kept the bad reviews from her, and she bravely faced two new audiences a night, even through a fever and although she recently had undergone cataract surgery.

She sold Grey Gardens in 1979 to Ben Bradlee and Sally Quinn (again of The Washington Post). They restored the house and the gardens, making them one of East Hampton's finest showplaces. Little Edie spent the next 20 years moving from Southampton to Montreal to California to Manhattan before settling in Florida.

She died in her small apartment in Miami Beach. Her body was found face down in the bathroom. She had been dead for five days.

Mrs. Radziwill's East Hampton house, on East Dune Lane, was sold in May for $16.2 million. The only Bouvier who still has a house here, Bouvier Beale Jr. of Amagansett, was to bring Miss Beale's ashes from Florida to the Bouvier family plot at the Most Holy Trinity Catholic Church Cemetery on Cedar Street in East Hampton.
4 posted on 07/12/2002 5:52:18 AM PDT by Lonesome in Massachussets
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To: Lonesome in Massachussets
Oh my God! What a fascinating/sad story!
5 posted on 07/12/2002 6:02:38 AM PDT by Ditter
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To: Lonesome in Massachussets
Hey, if I'm going to be gone more than a week or two, I arrange for someone to feed the cats.

Right! Or at least leave the cat out so he can find food elsewhere. He'll come back home.....cats rarely disappear.

6 posted on 07/12/2002 6:41:02 AM PDT by shiva
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To: Ditter
Why does this remind me of that scary Betty Davis movie from the 1960's...two old sisters in a decaying old mansion. Can't recall the title.
7 posted on 07/12/2002 6:45:15 AM PDT by Eric in the Ozarks
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To: shiva
Right! Or at least leave the cat out so he can find food elsewhere. He'll come back home.....cats rarely disappear.

Hey, I wasn't serious, I always have a neighbor kid feed the cats when we're away. Letting my cats out would merely turn them into beggars or dog food.

8 posted on 07/12/2002 6:45:55 AM PDT by Lonesome in Massachussets
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To: Eric in the Ozarks
http://www.filmsite.org/what.html

A grotesque Baby Jane Hudson (Bette Davis), a former child star, and paralyzed invalid sister Blanche (Joan Crawford), also a former movie star, live together in a gloomy mansion. [The mansion was located at 172 S. McCadden Place in the Wilshire district of Los Angeles.] Jane, whose career faded long ago, is now a deranged alcoholic.
There are many stunning scenes and excessive performances, particularly Jane's relentless torment of her sister:
- Jane serves roasted rats to Blanche for "din-din."
- Jane is garishly dressed up as a little girl as she is being coached by musical director Edwin Flagg (Victor Buono) for a comeback. She croaks, "I've Written a Letter to Daddy."
- The concluding beach scene finale, when a past secret is revealed to Jane, and she replies, "You mean, all this time we could've been friends?" She purchases two strawberry ice cream cones for them, then draws a circle of people around her as she spins and dances
9 posted on 07/12/2002 6:48:58 AM PDT by Lonesome in Massachussets
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To: Lonesome in Massachussets
Must have been an accident...had she wanted the cat dead, she could have asked OJ to take care of it.
10 posted on 07/12/2002 7:10:19 AM PDT by maximus@Nashville
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To: shiva
.....cats rarely disappear.

Unfortunately. :-D
11 posted on 07/12/2002 7:17:22 AM PDT by dsmatuska
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Comment #12 Removed by Moderator

To: Tabitha Soren
Can you stay on topic for even one thread?
13 posted on 07/12/2002 10:26:40 AM PDT by Britton J Wingfield
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To: Britton J Wingfield
I think its called Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder....
14 posted on 07/12/2002 10:29:12 AM PDT by Sam's Army
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To: Sam's Army
More like tourette's syndrome. I didn't know it worked with typing, though :)
15 posted on 07/12/2002 10:46:16 AM PDT by Britton J Wingfield
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To: Lonesome in Massachussets
Proving once again that anyone who would date OJ is a moron.

16 posted on 07/12/2002 10:48:07 AM PDT by Behind Liberal Lines
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To: Lonesome in Massachussets
She must have forgotten to put on her brain that day.

Or perhaps she hadn't had it on since she started seeing dear Mr. Simpson.

17 posted on 07/12/2002 10:48:34 AM PDT by Liberty 5-3000
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To: Eric in the Ozarks; Sungirl
Why does this remind me of that scary Betty Davis movie from the 1960's...two old sisters in a decaying old mansion. Can't recall the title.

"What Ever Happened To Baby Jane."

This is sick and sad and makes me angry.

18 posted on 07/12/2002 10:51:47 AM PDT by MotleyGirl70
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To: shiva
In a related story, OJ has announced that he won't rest until he finds the cat's real killer.
19 posted on 07/12/2002 10:54:09 AM PDT by tcostell
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To: Lonesome in Massachussets
There are so many single caring men around and these bimbos choose to date lethal O.J. Can one imagine how a father must feel when his daughter comes home and announces that she is dating the infamous O.J. Simpson?

However, in this case there may have been a match.

20 posted on 07/12/2002 10:57:22 AM PDT by vetvetdoug
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