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PHOENIX Some people in Phoenix are threatening to pull their support for the Humane Society after it euthanized a cat brought in for medical treatment by a former heroin addict.The Arizona Republic reports (http://bit.ly/tNzWqN ) that Daniel Dockery's 9-month-old cat, Scruffy, was put down not because of its wounds but because the 49-year-old Phoenix man couldn't immediately pay for its care.Dockery had been searching for Scruffy since taking it to the Humane Society three weeks ago and learned of Scruffy's fate on Tuesday. He says he's devastated.A Humane Society spokeswoman says the agency took Scruffy intending to treat it and put it in foster care, but when he was taken to a second-chance clinic with three other cats, doctors were only available to treat two of them.



know whether his initial target was among the victims.Click here to read more on this story from MyFoxChicago.com.Newscore contributed to this report.



o visit relatives and Jazmin Reyes, his 16-year-old girlfriend whom he had met on the Internet months earlier, the Chicago Tribune reports.Marron's family typically returned to their native town each Christmas, but they couldn't afford to make the trip this year. Marron was able to save enough money, however, from his summer job as a restaurant server, according to the Tribune.Dozens gathered Tuesday night in the suburb of Mount Prospect. They carried candles, flowers and balloons. The Daily Herald reports that the group prayed quietly in Spanish.Marron, a student at Rolling Meadows High School in suburban Chicago, loved spending time with family and "made everyone smile," said friend Joel Muneton."I found out through Facebook, and it was shocking," said Andres Montiel. "I've known him since I was like in first grade. It was just really rough."Fellow students reflected on what the rest of the school year will be like without him. A Facebook page titled "Red in






House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi was not dreaming of a white Christmas.For the third year in a row, the California Democrat shacked up in a sun-drenched, beachside hotel at Historic Ka'upulehu in Kona on the island of Hawaii, the Hawaii Reporter reported this week. For the past two years, Pelosi reserved a posh suite that fetches $10,000 a night.The Four Seasons Resort Hualalai offers visitors beachfront dining, fashion boutiques and Jack Nicklaus signature golf, the paper reported. In years past, the paper reported, local taxpayers coughed up $34,000 for police detail to escort Pelosi around the island.President Obama and his family are also spending the holidays at the tropical paradise during a 17-day vacation in Kailua, Oahu.



Former Disney star Demi Lovato. Demi Lovato attacked the Disney Channel on Twitter last week for mocking eating disorders and using increasingly smaller stars in their shows that cater to tweens. The network was quick to offer an apology, but experts say Lovato opened the Pandoras Box about the dangerous effects television shows can have on the negative body image of young women.The producers and writers should have known that a comment like this is ridiculous to be said on air by a character on any program targeted at teens, nutritionist Rania Batayneh tells Fox411.com.Lovatos beef was with a joke made about eating disorders on the show Shake it Up. One of the shows characters joked: "I could just eat you up, well, if I ate.""It is not a notable character trait to not eat,'" Batayneh said. "We have seen time and time again Disney actresses who struggle with their weight who are a bit obsessed as adults with their physique or just lose control all together and



APProponents of condom use during the filming of X-rated movies in Los Angeles garnered enough signatures to call for a June referendum that, if passed, would require condom use on porn sets throughout the city.But proponents must first get past a lawsuit filed by the city to prevent the ballot measure."We're thrilled we've passed this initial threshold," Ged Kenslea, a spokesman for AIDS Healthcare Foundation, the ballot's main backer, told The Los Angeles Times of qualifying on the ballot. "We believe we're going to prevail in court and look forward to taking this issue directly to the voters."To the reported surprise of city council members, Los Angeles city attorney Carmen Trutanich filed suit earlier this month to keep the AIDS Healthcare Foundation proposal off the ballot. Trutanich reportedly argued that only the state can legally impose the safe-sex rule and charge fees to pay inspections, so the city and county can't be forced to monitor compliance.The