At least two cats have been stabbed and five others attacked near Ditchling Rise since September

Three cats are believed to have died after at least two were stabbed and another five were attacked in Brighton during the last two months.

Sussex police have launched an investigation into the incidents, which were all reported within a short distance of Ditchling Rise in central Brighton since mid-September.

'Croydon cat killer' hunt ends after three-year investigation Read more

A police spokesman said: “Sussex police have received further reports of injured or deceased cats following the suspected stabbing of a pet in Ditchling Rise, Brighton, on Monday [19 November]. Two officers have now been allocated to investigate the reports and establish whether there may be links between those that have not been shown to be attacks by other animals or accidental injury.”

PC Andy Chapman said: “We are taking these incidents very seriously and we have already spoken at the North Laine local action team meeting. We understand the impact and emotional distress caused to the owners of much loved pets and we are determined to put an end to these attacks.

“However, we do need help from the public. I urge anyone with information or who believes that their pet has been the victim of a deliberate, malicious attack to report online or call 101 quoting Operation Diverge.”

In September, the Metropolitan police discontinued their three-year investigation into 400 reports of cat deaths attributed to the “Croydon cat killer” and said the deaths were likely to have been caused by foxes and vehicle collisions.

Tony Jenkins, of the animal charity South Norwood Animal Rescue Liberty (Snarl), which is investigating a series of cat deaths across the south-east that it attributed to a single elusive cat murderer, said the Brighton attacks seemed unconnected because the pets had been stabbed, rather than decapitated – but that there had clearly been human involvement in the attacks.

He said: “Without a shadow of doubt, there is a pattern of behaviour around the killings. Police have resource issues with funding cuts and couldn’t afford to investigate further and they took the easy route to blame foxes. There is clear evidence to suggest human interaction and we are continuing to investigate.

“We think it’s a separate perpetrator because there are stab wounds and the injuries are different; there are not decapitations as seen in the other cases. Although it’s horrible, it is not linked to the wider Croydon cat killer.”