
EXCLUSIVE Desperate homeowner who destroyed his £150,000 property 'brick by brick' in 17-year war with tenant loses everything as it's repossessed and sold by bank
A desperate homeowner who tried to dismantle his house after he exploded in frustration following a long-running dispute with a tenant has 'lost everything' after the property was repossessed.
Louis Scudder, 53, was forced to give up his childhood home which has now been sold off at auction.
The three bedroom home had been left in a shocking state of disrepair for nearly a year after Mr Scudder launched into a frenzied one-man demolition mission.
Mr Scudder was at the centre of a 24-hour stand-off with police in riot gear last August after he began destroying the end of terrace house - starting with the roof.
Friends told how Mr Scudder snapped after reaching the end of his tether following a 17-year battle to take back control of his £150,000 property in Sheerness, Kent, which he became convinced had been 'stolen from him'.
After a series of court battles the property was put up for sale by the bank with whom he had taken out a mortgage.
The house had a reserve price of £115,000 when it was put up for sale by estate agents Barnard Marcus at an auction at the Grand Connaught Rooms in central London in April.
It sold for £134,000 and is believed to have been purchased by a property developer.
The sale catalogue pointed out that auctioneers had not been able to inspect the freehold home and that purchasers would have to 'rely upon their own enquiries as to the internal layout of the property'.
No viewings were conducted and auctioneers explained 'no keys will be provided to the property upon completion. The property was being sold 'by order of the mortgagees'.
Neighbours - who were ordered to evacuate their homes during Mr Scudder's rampage - told how they are now hoping the house can be made habitable again and they can return to their peaceful lives.
Tanya Gray, who has lived in the streets for 28 years, told MailOnline: 'It was a lovely house but he completely wrecked it.
'He wanted to get the house back but he went about it the wrong way and now he's ended up losing it because the bank took it and put it up for auction. He's lost everything.'
Tanya, 58, added: 'The house has been in a terrible state ever since. It's a real eyesore.
'Before it went up for sale his friends were regularly going into the property but there has been no one since it went up for auction.
'No-one was allowed to go inside to view it because it was classed as unsafe. We've heard someone from London has bought it. They must be planning to do it up. Good luck to them.
There must be even more damage now because it's been left open to the elements for nearly a year. Hopefully that's the end of it. This is a family-orientated area and it would be nice if a nice quiet family will move in now.'
Mr Scudder took matters into his own hands after growing increasingly frustrated that he had been unable to live in his property.
Fearing the authorities were against him in March last year, Mr Scudder waited for long-term tenant Ayshea Kramer, 51, to go out before climbing in through a window to gain entry.
He removed her possessions and dumped them outside before changing the locks but was ordered by a court to quit the property and hand back the keys.
As a legal battle rumbled on, Mr Scudder returned to the property in June last year where he began ripping tiles off the roof and smashing windows with his bare hands - leaving himself covered in blood.
He was arrested and was bound over to keep the peace for 12 months for causing a public nuisance and breaching an injunction.
A dilapidated chimney and police tape are just two of the sorry sights to meet neighbours
Two months later, he returned with a sledgehammer to finish the job. Neighbours told how at the end of the terrifying rampage Mr Scudder left behind a scene of devastation they likened to 'a disaster movie'.
Officers in riot gear were drafted in while specially trained negotiators tried to coax him down from the rafters of his wrecked property.
Ambulance crews and fire fighters were also called in amid fears damage to pipes and cables could cause an explosion.
Walls came crashing down and pipe work was shattered as Mr Scudder rained blow after blow on the property reducing brickwork to piles of rubble.
At the time Danny Owen - who has lived in the street for more than a year - told MailOnline: 'He got on the roof and started tearing the house to pieces. He did it twice. The first time he tore the whole roof down with his bare hands. He smashed all the tiles. He was ripping them off and was throwing them.
'He punched the windows with his hands which were all cut and bloodied. There was scaffolding put up after that as attempts were made to fix the roof. 'He wasn't happy with it and he went up there again and wrecked the place.
'All I heard him say was 'I'm not coming out until I take this whole place apart - brick by brick. He said he was going to destroy the house. It's his family home. He grew up there. He owns it but he hasn't been allowed to live there.
'He says he tried to do things properly but in the end he felt helpless as everything always went in her favour. He demolished all the inside. He smashed up the bathroom and there was a worry because of all the pipework that was damaged. There was water leaking.
'There's been this long dispute with the tenant which has ended in a long legal fight. He reached breaking point and it ended with this. I feel sorry for him. He went about it the wrong way. It's very sad. He's hit rock bottom. He thought the authorities let him down and he had a genuine grievance.
'He should have gone about it differently but he obviously wasn't thinking like that.'
Another neighbour said: 'His attitude seemed to be 'If I can't have my house, you can't have it either' so he set out to demolish it. He went up there on the Wednesday and he didn't come down until Thursday evening.'
In the aftermath of the rampage Mr Scudder said: 'I feel like an injured fox being hounded. No-one's listening to me. I'm so angry inside.'
One friend of Mr Scudder told MailOnline: 'This has destroyed this man's life. He's a broken man and it's not fair how he's been treated.'
After one of Mr Scudder's court appearances last year, friends told how the property had been his childhood home which he went on to buy from the council.
One friend told how Mr Scudder was forced to leave the house for a number of years after finding himself in 'a challenging personal situation'.
He asked a relative to arrange for it to be rented out to help him pay off his mortgage.
But Mr Scudder claims that unbeknown to him a 25-year tenancy agreement had been signed.
In 1999 Ms Kramer moved into the property and it was there that she brought up her three daughters - twins aged 27 and their older sister who is now aged 31.
The friend claimed Mr Scudder only discovered about the terms of the tenancy in 2007.
The friend said: 'During all those years he's been homeless. He's been jumping from friend to friend, living in spare bedrooms, on sofas. If friends had motorhomes he would stay there for a couple of months, he stayed on boats - anywhere he could find. 'He's a man with a home that's homeless. It's ridiculous.
'He's the loveliest man you could ever meet. He just wants a quiet life. His dream in life which he was hoping this house could help him do was to buy a small piece of land and rescue animals.
Friends of Ms Kramer told how she has been left traumatised by the experience - losing her home and most of her possessions including treasured family photographs.
But Tobe Hayden, who assisted Mr Scudder in previous legal actions, said: 'I didn't know the house had been repossessed. I was assisting him for a while but then they went in a different direction. It was a terrible miscarriage of justice for him.'
Hashtags

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


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
Green grocer and ex-SAS commander hoping to kick Sadiq Khan out of office
After nearly a decade in power, Sir Sadiq Khan's rule as Mayor of London is coming under increasing scrutiny. With YouGov polling showing that crime, housing and health are seen to be getting worse in the capital, inventive politicians are now taking the fight to Sir Sadiq with viral video campaigns. The most high-profile example of this was Robert Jenrick's video of fare-dodging on the Tube, which showed the shadow justice secretary confronting rule-breakers. But while Mr Jenrick's team have ruled him out of any Tory mayoral race, other 'law and order' challengers to Sir Sadiq are also emerging on social media. They include a viral greengrocer, a former Royal Marines commando and a heavyweight boxing champion. Born in Romford, a traditional Tory voting part of outer London, Thomas Skinner began working as a market trader in East London at the age of 16 and later appeared as a candidate on The Apprentice, Sir Alan Sugar's business-based reality TV show. In his early career he was found guilty of handling £40,000 worth of stolen goods while working as a market trader. He has said of the spent conviction: 'I've made mistakes, in fact more than most, who hasn't made one?' Mr Skinner has since gathered a large following on social media for his jolly videos in which he discusses, in his thick Essex accent, the joys of having a 'cheeky pint' following a day of 'hard graft'. Yet in recent months, he has increasingly focussed on political issues, declaring 'I love Trump' and claiming 'London has fallen' under Sir Sadiq's mayoralty. He has also been involved in knife crime campaigning. 'London has fallen' Last week in a post that prompted speculation about his ambitions for public office, Mr Skinner railed against the decline of law and order in the capital and a loss of 'community'. 'London has fallen. But I'm not giving up on it,' he wrote, claiming that 'people are scared', 'it ain't safe out there anymore' and ' London don't feel like London no more '. 'We need leadership that understands the streets, the markets, the working class. People like me,' he wrote, opening the door to a potential mayoral run. It is understood Mr Skinner currently has no firm plans to run for office and is not affiliated with any political party. But Mr Skinner, who maintains 'I'm not a politician', nevertheless says he has been approached by three political parties in recent weeks. The Telegraph also understands that since he made the post, Mr Skinner has been contacted by members of the Prime Minister 's team. The call was intended to discuss the Government's plans for more skilled apprenticeships for those who, like Mr Skinner, left school at 16. But the attempt to reach out to a popular and rising voice of opposition could be taken as another Labour attempt to head off the threat from Reform. Reform sources say the party will likely fight the next London mayoral election with a focus on law and order, taking inspiration from the political battles over spiralling crime in 1980s New York City. Another figure spoken of as a Reform London mayor is Ant Middleton, the former Royal Marines Commando who made his name on military-based reality TV show SAS: Who Dares Wins. Mr Middleton has said 'it's inevitable that I'm going to be the next Mayor of London' and has already set out a raft of possible policies for the capital. These include introducing a 'Military Guard Unit' on the streets of London to 'be a reactive and deterrent force on the ground'. He suggested such a unit would only accept 'British applicants' and its task would be 'to uphold the values, principles and standards of what our great nation represents'. Mr Middleton endorsed Reform at its conference in September following the general election. He has since grown close to the party's leadership and even visited Washington DC with Nigel Farage for the second inauguration of Donald Trump. In March the UK Insolvency Service banned Mr Middleton from being a company director over unpaid taxes. Derek Chisora, the Zimbabwe-born heavyweight boxer, is spoken of as another possible mayoral candidate for the party. It is understood that Mr Chisora, a longstanding supporter of Reform UK and its predecessor the Brexit party, has been inspired by the success of fellow boxer Luke Campbell who won the Hull mayoral election for Reform in May. In January Mr Middleton and Mr Chisora both attended a slick fundraiser for the party at the Mayfair private members' club Oswalds. In previous elections Sir Sadiq benefitted from a ranked-preference voting system in which ballots cast for other Left-wing candidates would eventually end up in his pile. However mayoral elections are now largely fought according to first-past-the-post. It was the first-past-the-post system that nearly crowned Arron Banks, the billionaire Reform supporter, as mayor of the West of England in May. Despite the Left-wing bent of Bristol, the biggest city in the area, votes were scattered between Labour, Greens and Liberal Democrats with Mr Banks achieving an impressive second place and being just 6,000 votes away from taking power. In the capital, Reform is now projected to replace the Tories as the major political force in outer London if current polling numbers are reflected in the next parliamentary and Assembly elections in Greater London.


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
Albanian wanted for ‘ordering hit in blood feud' lived in Britain undetected for years
An Albanian fugitive wanted for allegedly ordering a murder in a blood feud in his home country has lived in Britain undetected for four years. Lorenc Lala, 47, was arrested by police this week after Albanian law enforcement tracked him down to the UK and issued a warrant seeking his arrest and extradition for trial in his home country. He is alleged to have organised the payment of 50,000 euros (£42,000) for the murder of Albi Bashaliu in 2021 in revenge for the previous killing of another man in the village of Gjocaj in Peqin. Lala is understood to have fled Albania to Britain in the belief that it provided a safer location outside the reach of the European arrest warrant. Since Britain left the EU, it is no longer part of the warrant system. 'A new generation of Albanians involved in organised crime and wanted in Albania, Italy, Greece or Germany are entering the UK illegally mostly in the back of lorries,' said an expert on Albanian organised crime. 'They are using the UK as a secure place to avoid as much as they can any European Warrant Arrest issued for them.' Chris Philp, the shadow home secretary, said: 'The UK cannot become some sort of safe haven for dangerous criminals. We need a crackdown on border security to ensure illegal immigrants and dangerous criminals cannot enter the UK. 'I am concerned that this Albanian suspect might try to exploit our weak human rights laws to stay here. That's why the human rights act needs to be repealed for immigration matters.' Lala was arrested by the Metropolitan Police extradition unit and appeared before Westminster magistrates on charges of conspiracy to murder in Albania. He is currently being held in custody before a further hearing in July as Albania seeks to extradite him. In a statement, the Albanian State Police said he had been charged in absentia for his alleged 'involvement in a blood feud murder, creating the conditions to kill, and for being a member of an organised crime group.' 'The killing of Albi Bashaliu took place in 2021. Lorenc Lala was the organiser of that murder, financing others to carry it out and creating the conditions for the crime to happen. He then helped the killer flee the crime scene,' said the statement. After the murder, Lala - who was also known by the alias Kristian Lala - fled Albania. He went into hiding in the UK. His whereabouts in the UK was eventually established through information shared by Albanian police with the UK authorities. Kreshnik Ajazi, the head of the prosecutor's office in Elbasan, a city in central Albania, who investigated this murder said they had solved the case after a member of the criminal group decided to cooperate with the police. 'His arrest in the UK and potential extradition by British courts is a major success and continues the excellent relationship between our authorities in terms of mutual cooperation in the criminal justice field,' he said. A Home Office spokesman said: 'The UK has extensive arrangements in place to work with law enforcement partners across the world, including Albania, to ensure that the UK can never be a safe haven for those seeking to evade justice.' A Home office source said it had formal extradition arrangements with Albania. Prior to leaving the EU, the UK only operated the European Arrest Warrant with EU Member States, which does not include Albania. The Telegraph revealed in 2023 how the record illegal Channel crossings of more than 12,000 Albanians in 2022 led to a crime surge, with 80 Albanian migrants being sentenced to 130 years in jail in the first four months of that year alone. A series of agreements between the UK and Albania to crackdown on crime and fast track deportations has led to the number of Albanians crossing the channel to drop to just 630 last year.


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
We still need to have difficult conversations about abortion
My mother remembers that, when she was a child, a friendly woman, probably in her thirties, lived next door. One day, that woman was gone. Another neighbour had helped her carry out a 'backstreet abortion' – in the days when terminating a pregnancy was illegal but coathangers were not – and she'd bled to death in her own home. I don't even know her name. But I thought of that poor woman this week when MPs voted overwhelmingly to stop women in England and Wales being prosecuted for ending a pregnancy outside the law – for instance, after 24 weeks. Thank goodness, I thought, we live in a nation where women no longer have to risk death or imprisonment in desperate situations. But if there's one thing I've learnt from a decade of writing about abortion – speaking to women, joining pro-choice marches and questioning anti-abortion protesters holding rosary beads and praying outside clinics – it's this. Whichever side you're on (and it's not always black or white), it's easier to make your case if you've engaged with those who don't agree with you. In this deeply emotive debate, talking it out is not only helpful but essential. So, on this heatwave weekend, if you're going to a family gathering or having barbecue with friends, and the topic comes up? Don't shy away from it. It's why I listened this week as LBC presenter Shelagh Fogarty told listeners of her lunchtime radio show: 'I am horrified by what happened in the Commons yesterday… I feel sad and deeply worried.' I expect many of us will have a woman in our lives who feels this way about Tuesday's vote, which saw MPs give abortion law its biggest overhaul in 50 years. No longer will women in England and Wales be prosecuted using an 1861 law designed for Victorian backstreet abortionists. Women will no longer be pulled from their hospital beds following a miscarriage and investigated on suspicion of causing their own late abortion (yes, this happened, and recently). But I also know that not everyone feels the same way, even my fellow women. You might know one of them – your mum, grandmother or aunt; a friend, sister or colleague. We need to be able to have these conversations with each other and not avoid it out of shame or fear (or how ever do we hope to have them with men?) So here's your basic toolkit for talking to a woman in your life who feels worried about what decriminalisation means. First, don't approach them with a 'you're so ignorant' stance – tempting though it might be – especially an older woman. They fought many of these battles first, or have had decades to think about them. Softly, softly. It's also best to shelve any arguments over when a clump of cells becomes a foetus or becomes a baby – if you disagree on that straight away, it's probably game over. Fogarty mentioned 'Sarah', who called her show to share how she'd experienced mental health issues at 35 weeks pregnant and felt the only way out was an abortion. It had helped Fogarty understand, she said, how 'demanding, exacting and desperate a pregnancy can be for some women'. That's what you're going for: compassion and an appreciation that no woman who procures her own abortion, late into a pregnancy, is doing so just because they can. It's not 'abortion on demand'. These women – and there are very few, around 0.1 per cent of all abortions each year – are vulnerable, backed into a corner, sometimes being coerced. They need help, not prison. So talk about Nicola Packer, who took abortion medication thinking she was less than 10 weeks pregnant and, when she went to hospital and discovered she was actually 26 weeks, was thrown in the back of a police van. She was finally cleared last month after a criminal trial. Or Carla Foster, who was jailed in 2023 after taking abortion pills between 32 and 34 weeks pregnant and at a time of serious distress. She was sentenced to 28 months and denied access to her other children, one of whom has special needs. She was freed after a public outcry, but not cleared. It's hard to see how locking these women up does anything useful. Deter others? The tiny number who are so very desperate enough to do this won't be deterred, though they may be put off from seeking medical care. And it's heartbreaking to think of women suffering the tragedy of miscarriage or stillbirth being treated with suspicion, not sympathy. 'Even if you're opposed to abortion, you can understand why the law shouldn't be used in that way,' says Katherine O'Brien from the British Pregnancy Advisory Service. Next: demystify. I've seen one too many social media posts saying 'abortion is now decriminalised in the UK up to the day of birth'. Except, it isn't. The Abortion Act 1967 requires a termination to be approved by two doctors and it can be performed until 24 weeks (10 weeks for pills by post), unless there are exceptional circumstances such as the woman's life being at risk. That still stands. A doctor who performs an abortion after 24 weeks, without there being exceptional circumstances, can be prosecuted. Now, a woman who ends her own pregnancy after 24 weeks, or without two-doctor approval, cannot. Stay calm. But if they can't? If language like 'murderers' or 'evil' comes up? Take a moment or agree to continue the conversation another time. You can't pretend the other side doesn't exist, but you can be safe in the knowledge that you're on the right side of history.