‘Baby Cat would’ve hated y’all!’ LA OnlyFans star, 30, reveals she’s made SEVEN new cat friends since moving to Bali after slamming China Airlines for banning her feline from flight and leaving her in vomit-soaked cage for 38 hours

An OnlyFans star whose beloved cat was stripped of her and returned to the US by China Airlines has befriended a family of cats outside her villa in Bali.

Content creator Nina Galy was left heartbroken after Baby Cat was flipped at Taiwan’s Taipei Taoyuan Airport in July due to a “human error” by LAX ground crew.

But her grief turned to anger when she realized her 10-year-old pet had been trapped in a vomit-soaked cage for 38 hours before finally being released.

Now Galy, 30, has revealed she made seven new feline friends while in Bali, despite still missing her beloved Baby Cat.

Content creator Nina Galy was left heartbroken after Baby Cat was flipped at Taiwan’s Taipei Taoyuan Airport in July due to a ‘human error’ by LAX ground crew

Galy has revealed that she has made seven new feline friends in Bali, despite still missing her beloved Baby Cat

The 30-year-old OnlyFans model accused China Airlines of keeping her cat in a cage for 38 hours after not allowing her to take the animal on the plane to Bali

While filming a video this week, she heard a meow in the distance and saw a mother cat helping her babies out of a tree.

Then she found what she believed to be the “dad cat” on her back patio outside her room.

The tomcat was extremely friendly and let Galy feed and pet him. Galy believes the orange cat is the “father” of the children who showed up after him.

Galy went out onto the patio to be with the cat family and said, “They were waiting for me to come home. Baby Cat would have hated all of you.’

Galy receives videos of Baby Cat from her mom every day and finds herself more playful than ever before.

Galy told DailyMail.com, “Baby Cat is more of a lonely cat, at least that’s what the vet told me in the past.”

While filming a video this week, she heard a meow in the distance and saw a mother cat helping her babies out of a tree

She wouldn’t let her new feline friends in because she was afraid they would be strays. She put a container of water in front of them and told them to “relax on the porch”

Speaking to DailyMail.com, Galy said she is considering legal action against the airline

She wouldn’t let her new feline friends in because she was afraid they would be strays. She put a container of water in front of them and told them to “relax on the porch.”

Her caption to her only story read, “They need to be taken care of before I let them come back in.”

One of the cats is named Stephanie, the villa staff said. Galy enjoyed dinner with her the other day while Stephanie jumped onto Galy’s lap and shared salmon and pancakes.

There are seven cats in total that Galy has found and she thinks this is due to the universal cat distribution system, where people meet cats based purely on circumstances. Gally described it as, “You don’t find cats, they find you.”

Although she couldn’t bring her own cat, she feels it happened for a reason and is happy that not one, but a family of cats found her.

Weeks later, Galy’s first TikTok — and several others since — caught the carrier’s attention, prompting a rep to contact Galy with an offer of compensation, after she spent nearly $1,500 on consultations and vaccinations to make sure the cat was healthy. could enter the country. She was also forced to pay an additional $1,900 for the flight home

Galy – who has more than 400,000 followers on TikTok – told DailyMail.com how the ordeal left both her and her cat emotionally and physically sick

Galy went viral in July when she accused China Airlines of traumatizing, sedating and starving Baby Cat by imprisoning it during an initial 13-hour layover from LA to Taiwan.

When the influencer arrived, airline officials told her the cat would not be allowed into Indonesia and she would have to fly back to the US immediately.

She eventually gave in, but was ultimately appalled to discover that the animal had urinated and vomited in her cage.

Weeks later, Galy’s first TikTok — and several others since — caught the carrier’s attention, leading a rep to contact Galy with an offer of compensation.

She had already spent $1,500 on consultations and vaccinations to ensure the cat could enter the country. She also paid an additional $1,900 for the flight home.

Galy previously told DailyMail.com how the ordeal left both her and her cat emotionally and physically ill.

“She’s been through everything with me from my college education to my divorce,” she said of the animal, which is called Baby Cat.

The influencer — who has attributed the airline’s apparent oversight to “human error” — added: “Honestly, I felt like the worst cat parent, the worst human being.

“It felt like I betrayed my cat.”

After Galy was told to return to the United States, she was unable to be with her cat for another 13 hours until the next plane left for LAX. Galy said China Airlines told her the cat is being held in the basement with a blanket over her carrier for now

She added that she had started legally importing Baby Cat to Indonesia more than three months earlier, spending $1,900 on travel expenses and certifications.

As her July trip to the country’s popular island approached, she said she thought she did everything she could to make sure her cat could come with her.

As she tracked down the right doctors, she gathered all the paperwork and paid for a series of blood and COVID tests for both her and Baby Cat.

Each test had to be separate, with each appointment two to three weeks apart, she said.

She was finally able to leave as planned on July 5, but she hit her first roadblock when she and Baby Cat arrived at the LAX airport.

It was there that Galy was told that her pet could not travel with her in the cabin, and would instead be stowed away as cargo.

For this, she said the airline charged her a total of $730 in four separate transactions, adding to her already expensive travel schedule.

China Airlines has since said that Baby Cat should not have boarded at LAX, but did not explain why – despite Galy insisting to DailyMail.com that she had carefully checked the rules and regulations for traveling with pets.

That being said, Galy further admitted that she thought this was just a minor hiccup along the way of her journey — that is, until she landed in Taiwan.

When she arrived, she said she was told by airline officials that Baby Cat could not enter Indonesia, claiming she was told “human error” was the reason.

They didn’t specify why and came to the decision even though the cat’s carrier had a final destination label to Bali on it, as required by the airline.

Her only option, she was told, was to fly them both back to the US.

She also had to pay for the flight back to the United States for both of them, even after admitting that they had allowed this accident to happen. While waiting for hours at Taipei Taoyuan Airport, Galy tried to ask China Airlines to at least fly her back to the US.

Speaking to DailyMail.com, she recalled how a manager would have responded with, “I don’t accept your opinion. China Airlines owes you nothing.’

From the time they boarded their first flight at LAX, Galy and Baby Cat had been separated for 13 hours.

After Galy was told to return to the United States, she was unable to be with her cat for another 13 hours until the next plane left for LAX.

Galy added that the airline told her the cat was kept in a basement with a blanket over her carrier during that period.

A representative said in an email that an internal investigation found that LAX staff had mistakenly allowed Baby Cat on the flight, and the staff “immediately explained the situation” to Galy,

That correspondence also highlighted that airline staff “ensuring the cat was well fed and in good health.”

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