Glad to hear that all the cats which were eligible have now been rehomed.
If there is one thing I wish people would learn from situations like this, it's that no man (or woman) is an island when it comes to animal husbandry. By all accounts, Moore believed that it was him - and only him - who knew how to best care for these animals, and viewed any attempt to correct his views as "lecturing" or "interference". This is not the first, second, or even the tenth time a zoo or sanctuary owner with this attitude has ended up falling foul of their own ego - often to the tune of criminal charges, life-changing injuries (or deaths), and suffering for the animals involved.
At the risk of reigniting a volatile discussion, this is also why I also feel a great deal of sympathy for the keepers and volunteers in these scenarios. One of the things you learn very quickly working in an animal collection is that your husbandry is only ever as good as the people at the top - you work to their knowledge, not the other way around. As in many cases of this kind, the animal care team functioned to the best of their ability within the restrictions placed by a lackluster management. Moore was determined to be the sole person calling the shots at "his" sanctuary - ergo, its ultimate failure lies squarely at his feet... or foot, as the case may be.