The family of nine
travellers living in a £1m home paid for by the taxpayer
A family of travellers is living in a £1million house at
taxpayers' expense.
John and Serena Connors and their seven children have their
rent paid by housing benefit.
Their landlady is trying to evict them because she claims they
have caused tens of thousands of pounds of damage.
Luxury:
The house the travellers live in has five bedrooms and three bathrooms
Her case is lent weight by a leaflet issued by the
Metropolitan Police allegedly about the family, which claims they are
suspects in a series of 'distraction' burglaries.
But the parents, who have five girls and two boys aged four to
19, are determined to stay put and are threatening legal action over 'racism against travellers'.
The Connors moved into the home in February with the help of
Barnet Council in North London. They are benefiting from the Local
Housing Allowance, which was introduced last year to encourage private
landlords to take in the homeless because of a shortage of council
housing.
Parents:
John and Serena Connors
The council is under obligation to find them a large enough
house, hence the family being placed in one of the most expensive
areas.
The property in Totteridge, which has been valued at nearly
£1million, has five bedrooms and three bathrooms and lies on a
usually peaceful street.
Businesswoman Sapna Bukhari and her IT project manager husband
Zulfi, both 38, used to rent it to professionals for £4,000 a
month.
But with the market deteriorating they agreed to let it out to
the Connors for £2,400 a month through housing benefit, after
being assured that they were 'good tenants'.
Mrs Bukhari alleged: 'Within a few weeks of them moving in, a
radiator was pulled off the wall and the water from it made the ceiling
collapse.
'They failed to tell us about it promptly, they threatened me,
my builder and my plumber, they abused me - calling me a "Paki" - and
gave anti-Semitic abuse to neighbours.
' They've twice blocked the drains so sewage has flowed on to
the pavement, have thrown food, clothes, cat excrement and all manner
of rubbish into the gardens, and shout and scream vile obscenities.
'They won't even let the builders come in to carry out
repairs. I'm worried the damage will cost tens of thousands.'
Mrs Bukhari went on to claim that she had run into problems
with paperwork while trying to evict them because the Connors 'seem to
know the system'.
'Social services are paying their rent but I'm sure they will
not stump up for the damage', she added.
The police leaflet was issued by the Totteridge Safer
Neighbourhood Team to all houses in the street except the Connors.
Although the family is not named, officers apparently readily
confirm to neighbours that members of it are involved.
Headed 'Warning', the leaflet tells of thieves targeting homes
by 'asking to use your toilet and general stories of hard luck'. It
says: 'All will end in them trying to enter your house and steal
anything they can get their hands on.'
It adds that the suspects are 'from the travelling community',
and describes two teenage girls with Irish accents.
Mrs Connors, who is originally from County Wexford in Ireland,
agreed that the leaflet was targeted at her family but said: 'I'm
making a complaint to the police about this leaflet.
'My kids are cheeky but they aren't thieves. We haven't
damaged the house either.
'The landlady doesn't like traveller. It's racism, I'm going
to get her done for harassment.'
She added that she didn't even want to live in the house and
would prefer to be in a travellers' camp.
'They put people into places you wouldn't put dogs into,' she
said.
A spokesman for Barnet Council said anyone evicted for
unreasonable behaviour would not be rehoused, and a source said they
were not aware of the family ever asking for an alternative home.
A Metropolitan Police spokesman said the force had not
received a complaint about the leaflet.
Read more:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1205854/The-family-travellers-living-1million-home-paid-benefits.html#ixzz0Nz7XghMC