A team of wildcat sanctuary workers drove down a windy, wooded dirt road in Indiana to a small, out-of-the-way animal breeding facility where they fully expected to find a pair of lions and two tigers in need of a good home. They never expected to find a tiger cub. Enclosed in chain-link fence, the compound contained four adult apex predators—the two lions and two tigers—but the sanctuary staff were stunned on finding a fifth cat, a baby tiger cub, born just hours earlier. The site was USDA licensed but far from ideal for the cats, with just a muddy grounds for the tigers to dwell, and a space of concrete and dirt for the lions. “I wouldn’t say they were abused, but there is a much better life ahead of them,” Thies told Fox19. “We knew that they were breeding and selling cubs online to other roadside zoos, even to …