Hoarder given criminal behaviour order over untidy garden
A hoarder has been handed a criminal behaviour order by a local authority for failing to clean his garden.
This means Cardiff council officers can now enter his property by force to clean it up.
William Glyn Cross, 80, from Spring Grove in Thornhill, was fined and ordered by Cardiff council to clean his garden in 2022 after neighbours complained it was so overgrown and unkept that it was attracting vermin.
As well as being fined £100 more in April 2025 for continuing not to comply with the notice, the criminal behaviour order now means the council can enter his property to clear it.
The initial enforcement notice stated the property had to be cleaned and cleared of rubbish by July 21, 2022, or the council could clear the waste in default and charge the landowner.
Cardiff council said local authority contractors were sent to clean up the garden but they were refused access.
Cross was fined £250 for failing to comply with the legal notice following a hearing at Cardiff Magistrates' Court in August 2023.
As the issue continued, he was taken to court again in March 2025 but failed to attend leading to the case being adjourned until 24 April.
Councillor Norma Mackie, Cardiff council's cabinet member responsible for Shared Regulatory Services, said there was no alternative but to take action.
"The owner of this property is causing unnecessary suffering to his neighbours due to the state of his back garden," she said.
"This has been going on for two years and his neighbours should not have to continue tolerating it.
"We have tried to help on numerous occasions but even when our contractors went to clear the accumulation of waste on his behalf he refused them access."
In a WalesOnline report from September 2023, Mr Cross said he was prepared to address the clutter at his property but wanted to do it on his own terms and said an enforced council clean-up would be a "desecration".
Hoarding a mental health emergency - group warns
MP calls for action on hoarding disorder
'Grief made me start hoarding - I slept in bed stacked with boxes'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fox News
12 hours ago
- Fox News
Dozens injured after driver plows through crowd of Liverpool soccer fans during victory parade
Police arrested the driver of a minivan on Monday after authorities say he plowed into a crowd of Liverpool, United Kingdom, soccer fans, injuring dozens who were celebrating the city's soccer team's Premier League Championship. Police identified the driver as a 53-year-old British man from the Liverpool area. Police also said they believe this was an isolated incident, adding that they do not believe anyone else was involved. The incident is not being investigated as an act of terrorism. Dave Kitchin of North West Air Ambulance said during a press conference on Monday that 27 people were taken to the hospital, with two suffering serious injuries, and another 20 people were treated at the scene for minor injuries. At least four children were injured. One of those children sustained serious injuries. Firefighters who responded to the scene had to lift the van to free three adults and one child, who were trapped beneath it. A cyclist paramedic on the scene was also struck by the van, though authorities said he did not sustain injuries. Merseyside Police said in a post on X that it was investigating reports of a collision in Liverpool city center, after being contacted after 6 p.m. on Monday that a car had collided with multiple pedestrians on Water Street. Police added that the vehicle stopped at the scene and a man was detained. "We would ask people not to speculate on the circumstances surrounding tonight's incident on Water Street in Liverpool city centre," police said in another post. "We can confirm the man arrested is a 53-year-old white British man from the Liverpool area. Extensive [inquiries] are ongoing to establish the circumstances leading up to the collision." Police asked the public to not share "distressing content" online, but instead to send the footage or information to the Merseyside Police or to Crimestoppers. Video posted to social media prior to the police department's request to not share information online, showed a gray minivan striking at least one pedestrian before veering into a larger crowd of people, carving a path through the group and pushing bodies along the street like a plow before coming to a stop. The Associated Press spoke with Harry Rashid, who was at the Liverpool parade with his wife and two young daughters. Rashid said the car began ramming people about 10 feet away from him. "It was extremely fast," he said. "Initially, we just heard the pop, pop, pop of people just being knocked off the bonnet of a car." British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said in a post on X that he was being kept up to date on developments regarding the situation and asked that police be given the space needed to conduct their investigation. "The scenes in Liverpool are appalling – my thoughts are with all those injured or affected," he wrote. "I want to thank the police and emergency services for their swift and ongoing response to this shocking incident." The incident came after a large celebration in the city center, where tens of thousands of dancing, scarf-and-flag-waving fans braved wet weather to line the streets and watch Liverpool's players display the Premier League trophy from on top of two buses bearing the words, "Ours Again." Rashid told the AP that after the van struck its initial victims, it stopped and the crowd charged the vehicle, smashing its windows. "But then he put his foot down again and just plowed through the rest of them, he just kept going," Rashid said, alleging the incident appeared deliberate. "It was horrible. And you could hear the bumps as he was going over the people." "My daughter started screaming and there were people on the ground," he added. "They were just innocent people, just fans going to enjoy the parade."


Fox News
12 hours ago
- Fox News
Police use water cannon in response to anti-immigrant violence in Northern Ireland town
Demonstrators pelted police with bricks, bottles and fireworks and set vehicles alight on Tuesday in a second night of anti-immigrant violence in the Northern Ireland town of Ballymena. Police used water cannon and plastic baton rounds in an attempt to disperse a crowd of several hundred people in the town 25 miles (40 km) north of Belfast. Violence erupted Monday after a peaceful march to show support for the family of the victim of an alleged sexual assault on the weekend. Two 14-year-old boys have been charged. The suspects have not been identified because of their age. They were supported in court by a Romanian interpreter. Several houses were set on fire on the first night of disorder on Monday. The Police Service of Northern Ireland said 15 officers were injured. Assistant Chief Constable Ryan Henderson said officers were "actively working to identify those responsible for last night's racially motivated disorder in Ballymena and bring them to justice." He said the violence should be "loudly condemned by all right thinking people. "Any attempt to justify or explain it as something else is misplaced," he said.


CBS News
15 hours ago
- CBS News
"Rioting and disorder" in Ballymena, Northern Ireland sees "hate-fueled acts" reportedly targeting foreigners
London — Hundreds of masked demonstrators attacked officers during a second night of "rioting and disorder" in the Northern Ireland town of Ballymena on Tuesday, injuring 17 officers, according to police. The Northern Ireland police condemned the unrest on Wednesday, saying 32 officers had been injured in total since the disorder — reportedly an explosion of simmering racial tension — was sparked by an alleged sexual assault in the town. "The mindless violence witnessed over the past two nights in Ballymena is deeply concerning and utterly unacceptable," Chief Constable Jon Boutcher said in a statement. "Hate-fueled acts and mob rule do nothing but tear at the fabric of our society. They resolve nothing and serve no one." At least five people were arrested overnight, as four houses were damaged by fire and demonstrators smashed windows of homes and businesses, according to CBS News' partner network BBC News. Police respond to a second night of violence in Ballymena, Northern Ireland, as people take part in what the police called "rioting and disorder," sparked by an alleged sexual assault in the Country Antrim town, June 10, 2025. Niall Carson/PA Images/Getty "Police officers came under sustained attack over a number of hours with multiple petrol bombs, heavy masonry, bricks and fireworks in their direction," the Police Service of Northern Ireland said in a statement. The protests began just hours after two 14-year-old boys appeared in a court Monday over the alleged sexual assault of a teenage girl in the town. BBC News said the boys had communicated through a Romanian interpreter. Ballymena has a large immigrant population, according to AFP news agency. Residents described the violence as "terrifying" and told AFP that "foreigners" were being targeted. A burned out house is seen following a second night of violence in Ballymena, Northern Ireland, during unrest sparked by an alleged sexual assault case, June 11, 2025. Multiple cars and properties were set on fire in Ballymena while rioters hurled petrol bombs, fireworks and masonry at police officers. Niall Carson/PA Images/Getty A Romanian resident in Ballymena told the Irish Times newspaper on Tuesday that she had put a British flag on her front window to avoid being targeted. Northern Ireland lawmaker Paul Frew told BBC Radio that he feared the violence could turn deadly, saying tension in the town had been rising for a while, and people were "frightened about illegal immigration." There has been no confirmed information about the immigration status of the teenagers who appeared in court on Monday.