A man has been found guilty of conducting a "series of little acts" which caused harassment to his next-door neighbour. Alexander Edwards' campaign of harassment included cutting a hole in his neighbour's hedge to get a better view of the mountains from his bedroom window.
Edwards also shone a torch at his neighbours CCTV camera, sang rap music and provoked dogs into barking late at night. Ian Cox, the victim of Edwards' harassment complained to the council and on Wednesday March 30 Edwards' confessed to the wrongdoings.
A judge at Llandudno Magistrates Court ordered Edwards to 80 hours of unpaid work. The court heard that it was Edwards' mother Jane who started the row with neighbour Mr Cox and when Edwards' came to live with her in Pengarth, Conway, in Wales he became involved in that row, reports North Wales Live.
Prosecutor Rhian Jackson said that Mr Cox reported issues with Mrs Edwards to Conwy Council as long ago as 2014. He was helped by an anti-social behaviour officer and was advised to keep a log. Mr Cox also installed a CCTV camera.
In 2020 a hole appeared in Mr Cox's hedge. There was no CCTV footage of the culprit but Edwards later admitted making it "so he could see the view of the mountains from his bedroom window".
But there was footage of Edwards shining a torch at the CCTV camera at night. The court heard Edwards would also encourage dogs to bark at midnight or 1am.
In another incident, Edwards would sing rap music lyrics at Mr Cox. These included the line "I'm f****** gonna kill yer," said the prosecutor.
Today's case centred on a series of incidents between July 2021 and January this year which amounted to harassment. The prosecutor said someone, later found to be the defendant, cut the hole, several feet square, in Mr Cox's hedge without permission on July 5.
Then Edwards stuck up his middle finger towards Mr Cox in their street on August 2. He did the same to Mr Cox in his van, then ran after him causing alarm, on January 4.
And he spat at Mr Cox's van window later that day. In a victim statement, Mr Cox said the incidents mean he cannot use his garden and he is reluctant to walk on their estate.
"He just wants to be left alone to live a normal life," said the prosecutor. Graham Parry, defending, said Edwards had had a view down the valley until the hedge grew "out of control".
He said the defendant was allowed to cut the hedge, albeit on his own side. The District Judge Gwyn Jones told Edwards in the dock: "For whatever reason, you got embroiled in a dispute which is not of your making.
"Whatever the rights and wrongs of this matter, you conducted a series of little acts which caused harassment to your neighbour. It was anti-social behaviour."
The District Judge noted that Edwards had never "troubled the courts" before but he added: "I'm satisfied that this offence is serious enough to justify a community order." As well as imposing the 12-month community order to do the unpaid work, the District Judge made a four-year restraining order prohibiting the defendant from contacting or approaching Ian Cox directly or indirectly.
It also bans him from entering the curtilage of any property occupied by Mr Cox. The defendant must also pay £85 costs and a £95 surcharge.
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