Yes they could get rabies cause the animal that they ate could have fleas or rabies on it bye last pray it killed
If the mouse bites the cat, yes.
yes
Yes, if the mouse has rabies.
if the cat ate a rabid mouse you could get rabies ,but 9 times out of 10 it will just hurt.
Mice don't transmit rabies.
Go and see a doctor.
Mouse give you rabies without the skin being broken
Rabies is transmitted through the salvia. If a cat has rabies, he can infect you with it. If a person is bitten or scratched by a cat with rabies, they have the possibility of getting rabies. An animal with rabies can show several symptoms. It can be disoriented, dumb looking, vicious, tired, foaming at the mouth, and/or unable to swallow. The only way to check for rabies is to send the head of the animal off for brain biopsy. For humans there is no test. If you are bitten or scratched by a rabies animal, go get rabies shots immediately.
no it's dead
It is unlikely. Rabies is caught by the transfer of bodily fluids, and if an infected cat bites you, you may get rabies from his saliva. In order to catch rabies from a cat scratch, the cat must have bodily fluids on his claws, which is unlikely unless his feet are bleeding for some reason. If a cat gets into a fight with a rabid cat, and then scratches you when you try to separate them, it is possible that the rabid cat's blood can get into the scratch.
rabies
If a cat has a rabies shot after it has already become infected with rabies, the shot will be ineffective and the cat can infect people despite having been vaccinated. If the cat receives its rabies shot while it is healthy, and if the shot is effective (which it is nearly all the time), then the cat cannot catch rabies and cannot infect a human. However, a very small number of rabies shots (about one in 100,000) is not effective. Note that the rabies vaccine can lose effectiveness if it is mishandled. In almost all cases, if the original shot is ineffective, the booster shot corrects it.
Yes. It is always legal for a cat to kill a mouse. Laws in general cannot be made to apply to animals because animals can't understand them. The cat's owner may be subject to civil law if the mouse is a valued pet. the mouse's owner could bring suit, one supposes. If the mouse is a wild mouse living in the walls of the apartment, the apartment landlord could, perhaps, be sued for allowing an infestation of mice; the cat killing the mouse would be legal, but the apartment owner might be breaking the law by not maintaining his apartment in a safe and sanitary state.
Well it thik because cats can get rabies so yes i think.