Northeast
On National Kitten Day, two cat parents reveal the secrets of successful fostering
Wednesday, July 10, is “National Kitten Day,” a celebration of all cats under a year old — and amid what animal shelters call “kitten season,” there are increased calls for foster families to help free up space.
Fox News Digital spoke to two seasoned kitten foster parents about the process and their own personal stories.
“Fostering is providing a temporary home for cats and kittens that are looking for forever homes,” Linnea Gomez, of Greenbelt, Maryland, told Fox News Digital in a phone interview.
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“You’re taking care of them in the meantime and meeting potential adopters and helping to facilitate getting them into their forever homes.”
Gomez has been fostering cats with the organization A Cat’s Life Rescue for about two-and-a-half years. She’s fostered 43 kittens since she began fostering, as she put it, “accidentally.”
It’s a myth that foster pet parents will want to adopt all their kittens, said Linnea Gomez of Maryland — although she did adopt Fable (above), one of her former charges. (Courtesy Linnea Gomez)
“I love animals, I love cats, and a friend of mine on Facebook had posted this desperate plea for help,” Gomez said. “She had this kitten that she couldn’t foster, and she was going to have to let him go because he was a little older and feral, and she thought he could be domesticated.”
That cat, “a 4-month-old, hissing, angry kitten,” then moved in to Gomez’s garage, where he stayed for a couple of weeks.
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“By the end of that, he and I were best friends, and I was hooked,” she said.
Tina LeBaron of Ellicott City, Maryland, also fosters cats with A Cat’s Life Rescue, she told Fox News Digital in an email.
“He and I were best friends, and I was hooked.”
She got into fostering after her daughter suggested it because they already had a dog and an older cat and thought it would be a good house for kittens to socialize with dogs and children. Their older cat, Stormy, was adopted from another A Cat’s Life Rescue foster home.
Despite her relatively short time in fostering kittens, she and her family have already fostered “about 13 cats.” Right now, they have two cats ready to be adopted.
One kitten foster parent — four of hers are shown here — told Fox News Digital it’s “great” watching the kittens learn about the world. (Courtesy Tina LeBaron)
“Ten of [the fosters] were kittens, and three of them have been adults,” she said. “Our first group was a litter of five, which was a bit of a learning experience.”
While LeBaron had grown up with cats who went on to have kittens, fostering kittens who had previously lived outdoors was very different, both for her and the cats.
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“When [the kittens] come from areas where they were eating trash or food was scarce, they need to learn to be comfortable with more than just humans – and some get it sooner than others,” she said. “Fostering teaches you how different each kitten’s personality is.”
‘Never know what they’ll like’
A foster kitten should have food, medication, kitten-sized litter boxes and “a lot of toys” on hand, LeBaron said.
“You never know what they’ll like,” she said.
Places for a kitten to hide, such as cat trees, are also useful.
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“In some ways, it’s more important [to know] what you don’t need, too,” she said. “Everyone knows kittens can be curious or hide when they’re in a new environment, and when they haven’t been socialized to a home, sometimes they pick the strangest places to hide.”
She also said, “I didn’t know how many different types of cat playpens they made until I started fostering.”
Gomez has exclusively fostered kittens, as her house is smaller and kittens need less room than an adult cat. She has three foster kittens named Pastina, Macaroni and Ravioli.
“I keep them in a bathroom,” Gomez said.
She has two “resident cats,” including Fable, a “foster fail” whom she adopted directly from fostering.
Both of Tina LeBaron’s “resident cats” were from A Cat’s Life Rescue, she told Fox News Digital. Tiramisu, on the right, was a “foster fail” and was adopted from a litter that the LeBarons fostered. (Courtesy Tina LeBaron)
Fable, unlike his brother, Ballad, does not enjoy the presence of his foster siblings and must be kept separate from them, Gomez said.
Ballad, on the other hand, “loves to play with [the kittens], wants to interact with them. He’s like their uncle.”
Fostering kittens is ‘doing a service’
Both Gomez and LeBaron agreed the biggest “myth” associated with fostering kittens is that a person will be tempted to keep all of them.
“I love helping all of them, but from their personalities you can tell some wouldn’t find your house to be the best fit,” LeBaron said.
Gomez said that while seeing the kittens get adopted by others is hard, “once you do it a couple of times, it gets easier.”
She said, “You see how happy people are with their new family members and see how happy the cats are in their new homes. And so it becomes worth it.”
Macaroni (left), Ravioli (center) and Pastina (right) are current foster cats of Linna Gomez – her 41st, 42nd and 43rd foster cats. (Courtesy Linnea Gomez)
Fostering, Gomez said, is “really doing a service and helping out so that the cats aren’t in shelters or out on the street.”
Another misconception about fostering kittens, LeBaron said, is the amount of work and time needed.
“I think the other misconception is that it’s a lot of physical work the whole time or that you’re always trying to socialize them, and they’re resistant,” she told Fox News Digital.
While “there are times [when] it’s a lot of work, especially at first,” LeBaron said, “any comfort you can give to the kittens helps win them over.”
As the kittens grow and become more comfortable, taking care of them gets easier, she said.
“Any comfort you can give to the kittens helps win them over.”
“Some of the older cats have gotten so comfortable that they started thinking of this as their forever home, but I’m happy to report that all three adapted to their real forever homes in less than a week and have been extremely happy there,” she said.
Plus, LeBaron said, the experience of raising baby animals can just be downright adorable.
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“The fosters can teach the permanent cats just as much as the permanent cats teach the fosters,” she said, noting that one of the older cats she fostered taught her cat Tiramisu how to open containers by dropping them.
“It’s also great watching the kittens learn everything,” LeBaron said. “For instance, the first time our fosters saw a ladybug they stared out the window and watched for almost an hour.”
Anyone who is considering fostering cats can contact a local organization and “let them know your interest,” said one foster parent. (Courtesy Tina LeBaron)
Anyone thinking about opening their home to kittens – or any cats in need of a temporary home – should “do it,” LeBaron said.
“If you want to try it, reach out to an organization and let them know your interest,” she said. “A lot of times they have some of the necessary items you’ll need and can help you get set up. If you don’t like it, you can always stop.”
Gomez said fostering kittens, while it may seem intimidating, “is more doable than I think people realize.”
Fostering kittens “is awesome,” she said. “I love it.”
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Northeast
From palace to prison: Venezuelan strongman Maduro locked in troubled Brooklyn jail
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Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, are spending their days for the foreseeable future at a notorious jail in Brooklyn known for housing high-profile defendants awaiting trial in New York City.
The Metropolitan Detention Center, known as MDC Brooklyn, is a sprawling, industrial-style facility that has faced a series of scandals in recent years involving assaults and poor prison conditions. Maduro, the Venezuelan leader arrested in his home in Caracas by the U.S. military over the weekend, is now being held at the jail on narco-terrorism conspiracy, cocaine importation and weapons charges.
MDC Brooklyn currently holds more than 1,300 inmates, according to the Bureau of Prisons. A BOP representative confirmed to Fox News Digital that Maduro and his wife were among that figure.
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Federal officers stand guard outside the Department of Justice next to the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn after the U.S. captured Nicolás Maduro and his wife, in New York City, Jan. 3, 2026. (Reuters/Eduardo Munoz)
MDC Brooklyn inmates include little-known defendants and prominent ones, and they face a range of mild to serious charges.
Maduro is likely to be held in what is known as the “VIP section” of the jail, according to Renato Stabile. Stabile is a New York-based criminal defense lawyer who represented former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández, who was also held in MDC Brooklyn before he was freed in December as a result of Trump granting him a controversial pardon.
Stabile told Fox News Digital the VIP section is part of the east side of the jail, where high-profile figures like Hernández, rap artist Sean “Diddy” Combs and convicted crypto fraudster Sam Bankman-Fried were once held. Others at MDC Brooklyn include Luigi Mangione, the 27-year-old accused of murdering a top health insurance CEO. Jeffrey Epstein’s associate, Ghislaine Maxwell, was also held there.
People celebrate in front of the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn on Jan. 3, 2026, after the capture of Nicolás Maduro. (Reuters/Eduardo Munoz)
Those on the east side will be “hanging out together every day and watching TV together and playing pingpong together and doing whatever they do on that side,” Stabile said. He said the west side, where general population inmates are held, might be more crowded but that treatment of them was likely otherwise the same.
One reason inmates are segregated based on their notoriety could be that they are more vulnerable to violence or extortion, he said.
MDC Brooklyn is a male and female jail, but the inmates are not intermixed by sex, so Maduro and his wife might not be able to interact much there, except during joint meetings with their lawyers.
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NYPD officers stand guard on a blocked road outside the MDC Brooklyn on Jan. 5, 2026, in New York City. (Alexi J. Rosenfeld/Getty Images)
Maduro is being represented by New York-based attorney Barry Pollack, who previously represented WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. Maduro and his wife pleaded not guilty in court on Monday and now await their next court appearance, slated for March 17.
MDC Brooklyn has repeatedly come under scrutiny for its troubles, including a week-long power outage in the winter of 2019 that left inmates in freezing conditions, multiple inmate murders and assaults in 2024, and several allegations of inhumane conditions, including inadequate medical staffing and unsanitary food.
Stabile said, in his view, the facility is “run fairly efficiently.”
“But I can tell you that the east side is run a lot more efficiently than the west side, just because there are less people,” he said, noting that lawyers can see their clients with less hassle.
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Boston, MA
Boston City Hall intruder who stole from employees nabbed by police, after shoplifting arrest: BPD
Boston Police said they have nabbed the masked suspect who entered private office suites in City Hall during work hours and stole wallets stuffed with cash and credit cards from multiple employees.
The Boston Police Department identified Darrin O’Neil, 60, of Lowell as the suspect involved in the City Hall thefts, which occurred last month, on Dec. 1.
O’Neil was already being held after a prior shoplifting arrest at DICK’s House of Sport on Boylston Street when he was identified as the alleged perpetrator of the City Hall crime, following what the cops described as an “extensive investigation,” Boston Police said on Wednesday.
Three City Hall employees reported that their wallets, which contained cash, credit cards, health savings account cards, and personal ID were stolen from their offices, per Boston Police reports.
One woman who had her wallet snatched out of her purse with two credit cards, her City Hall ID, Massachusetts driver’s license, insurance and library cards, and $100 in cash told police two of her coworkers saw an unknown man “in the area who was wearing a brown beanie, dark jacket, sweatpants, and a blue face mask.”
Two other employees told police that not only were cash and credit cards stolen from their offices, but the thief used the cards to rack up hundreds of dollars in unauthorized purchases — totaling $1,500 at Macy’s and Walgreens.
The incident led to calls from two city councilors, Ed Flynn and Erin Murphy, for the city to tighten up security protocols in light of the intrusion and theft, which occurred during work hours and was described by both as a “security breach.”
Mayor Michelle Wu’s office said a day later that steps have already been taken to increase security after the incident, which involved unauthorized access to “several” office suites that are restricted to authorized personnel only.
Municipal Protective Services, which provides security for city buildings, has increased internal patrols throughout City Hall as a result of the incident, the mayor’s office said.
O’Neil was arrested on shoplifting charges on Dec. 27 at 760 Boylston St., after he was seen inside DICK’s House of Sport concealing merchandise, police said.
Police said they had responded to the store at 11:39 a.m. for a report of a theft in progress.
While police approached, O’Neil was seen exiting the sporting goods store. The cops “were able to quickly stop the suspect and could see clothing with tags affixed to them inside of a bag,” police said.
During a search, about $408 of stolen merchandise was recovered, police said.
For the shoplifting incident, O’Neil was arrested and charged with larceny under $1,200 and being a common and notorious thief, police said.
After further investigation, police said they determined that O’Neil had seven active warrants for his arrest for charges of four counts of larceny from a building, three counts of receiving stolen property under $1,200, two counts of larceny of a credit card, shoplifting by asportation, credit card fraud under $1,200, and shoplifting by concealing merchandise.
After O’Neil was identified as the alleged City Hall thief, police said they sought additional criminal complaints in Boston Municipal Court on charges of two counts of larceny from a building, two counts of credit card fraud under $1,200 and being a common and notorious thief.
O’Neil is expected to be arraigned at Boston Municipal Court at a later date.
Following BPD’s announcement on Wednesday, Flynn said “larceny and retail theft must be a top priority for our city.”
“We must have zero tolerance for any type of theft and those arrested must be held accountable in our court system for their criminal behavior,” Flynn told the Herald.
Murphy said, “This incident was unacceptable, and I am glad the individual responsible has been arrested. My focus throughout has been on employee safety and securing City Hall offices. City Hall must be a safe workplace, and this incident underscores the importance of secure offices and prompt action.”
Mayor Wu’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment on police identification of the alleged City Hall larceny suspect.
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