mr.dede
Legendary Member

- Messages
- 11,499
- Joined
- Dec 1, 2010
- Messages
- 11,499
- Reaction score
- 228
- Points
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speaking sikit...
It was an astonishing case. Eccentric hoarder Richard Wallace had accumulated so much rubbish in his back garden that it could be seen from space – much to the fury of his neighbours. But when his local council served a notice on him to remove it, he took his case to the crown court – arguing that it was his ‘human right’ to hoard junk on his land – and won. Now, in an extraordinary twist, the case has taken a new turn – without the need for lawyers and judges. Mr Wallace, 61, has already cleared the rubbish from his garden, which was so out of control it showed up on Google Earth – and he was helped by the very neighbours he had been in dispute with for years
It was an astonishing case. Eccentric hoarder Richard Wallace had accumulated so much rubbish in his back garden that it could be seen from space – much to the fury of his neighbours. But when his local council served a notice on him to remove it, he took his case to the crown court – arguing that it was his ‘human right’ to hoard junk on his land – and won. Now, in an extraordinary twist, the case has taken a new turn – without the need for lawyers and judges. Mr Wallace, 61, has already cleared the rubbish from his garden, which was so out of control it showed up on Google Earth – and he was helped by the very neighbours he had been in dispute with for years