KATIE Price’s cat collection seems to have grown once again.
The 46-year-old shared a picture of THREE designer sphynx cats today – despite calls for her to be banned from owning more pets and being branded a ‘serial animal killer’.
Just last month bankrupt Katie splashed out £800 on one of her favourite hairless cat, naming her Daisy.
The latest image, which she captioned ‘my baby’s’ , shows Daisy and two other cats, although it is unclear which ones they are.
She previously owned Dobby and Hagrid who were named after the characters in Harry Potter.
In 2017 she claimed she was selling the pair for £1,300 because they didn’t get on with her dogs, but they have continued to appear in pictures since.
And earlier this year Katie told how she was forced to put down her last designer cat, Frog, after he fell ill.
In her memoir Katie wrote: “He had a neurological disease. There was absolutely nothing I could do. Within days it had spread through his body right to the point that he couldn’t even go to the toilet on his own. So I cuddled him in my arms and he had to be put to sleep. He was only five months old.”
It comes after former glamour model Katie had seven pets die in just six years.
Charity People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) insists there needs to be an injunction stopping the mum-of-five from owning pets.
Founder Ingrid Newkirk told The Sun: “If there was a way to file an injunction to stop this serial animal killer, PETA would do so, as this woman doesn’t care about the lives she wastes or listen to vital advice and is still treating live animals like stuffed toys: as disposable.
“If William Hill took totally tasteless bets, the odds would favour those betting on how little time this kitten has on Earth, given the hideous track record of animal deaths in Price’s custody. No one could call it ‘care’.”
PETA previously offered Katie £5,000 to stop buying pets – and Ingrid says the offer still stands.
She continued: “Shame on Price and the greedy breeders who keep selling or “gifting” animals to her as promotions.
“PETA’s financial offer – of £5,000 if she agrees never to acquire any more animals – still stands, and we implore her to take us up on it.”