Sunday, 10 September 2023

Taking The P***?: Perfumer Harassed By Neighbour's Patio Urine Pour

"Weapon Of Mass Destruction": Mackinlay
A perfumer with a “trained nose” was tormented by her elderly next-door neighbour, who repeatedly threw urine into the basement patio of her £5m Chelsea family home, a court heard.

Anastasia De Brauwere Brozler, 57, spent months trying to find the cause of the “absolutely disgusting” odour, which negatively effected her business as she felt her perfume oils were contaminated.


At City of London Magistrates’ Court neighbour Janine Mackinlay, 81, of Cheltenham Terrace was convicted of harassing Anastasia and her lawyer husband Alain De Brauwere, 60, between September 1, last year and February 10.


The widow, who earns £7,000 per-month from commercial rents, was also convicted of causing criminal damage to the couple’s property and ordered to pay £2,922 compensation for the clean-up.


The neighbours reside at the end of the Grade II-listed terrace, which overlooks the Duke of York grounds near Sloane Square and Mackinlay’s property is currently on the market for £4.75m.


“When the pungent smell first first blew into the kitchen we thought it came from sewage and brought in someone to check,” Austrian-born mother-of-two Anastasia told the trial.


She has corporate and private clients, who range from 'princes, ballerinas, actors and politicians' and runs a perfume school and is the boss of Creative Perfumers London Ltd.


“Then the gasman said it was urine and we thought: ‘Gosh. There must be a leakage in one of our lavatories.’


“In December it was horrific and we put the Christmas tree in the patio for a more elegant touch and had some professionals clean that area.


“It was very unpleasant and it did not cross my mind at all it would be deliberately thrown onto the patio,” she told the court. “It felt really unhealthy to have food stored in the fridge.


“Every time you opened the door this pungent smell of urine would enter the house and we could not open our window. There is also a ventilator that is permanently open that drew in the smell.


“Every time we heard a splash we wrote it down and found out the cause when my husband saw the neighbour and then we asked the Cheltenham Residents Association to access the CCTV.


“We could see our neighbour on the CCTV regularly throwing, sometimes three times a day, disgusting urine onto our patio.

Odour: Anastasia De Brauwere Brozler & Alain De Brauwere


“We would always hear ‘splash, splash’ and it accumulated and really stunk down there. The walls were marked with yellow stains and my fresh flowers literally died.


“It had an impact on my children. We couldn’t have breakfast, lunch or dinner in the kitchen and it impacted me.


“I have a trained nose. I am a perfumer that works from home and I know I’m foreign and that is a big problem for our neighbour, that we are foreign.”


She denied a defence suggestion Mackinlay was aiming for her own plant pots and innocently missed. “She wasn’t aiming at her pots, it is easy to aim at a plant pot.


“My husband went to her house with goodwill, but she screamed that we should go to hell and go back to our own country.


“We have paid many, many people to reduce this unbelievable smell,” Anastasia told the magistrates. “She is extremely angry to me and verbally abusive to me and my children.


“We were surrounded by a lack of oxygen and I had to put scented candles everywhere and plants outside. We could not use the kitchen and I could not work there even though I need running water.”


She said her daughters, aged 18 years-old and 13 years-old, had suffered. “We had serious concerns about our children’s health, my youngest daughter was coughing and we were physically sick.


“We smelled urine even morning. It was disgusting, absolutely disgusting.”


Her Dutch-born husband Alain, a Harvard Law School graduate, who advises City financial institutions, told the trial: “I saw next-door opening and the splash happened that I heard before.


Scent Of Crime: Mackinlay Poured Urine Into Basement Patio
“I ran up the basement stairs and it was clearly wet. It was clearly urine and I heard the door closing of my neighbour’s house.


“I climbed over the fence and rang the doorbell and knocked, but there was no reaction and I called the police.


“My wife has a very sensitive nose and for various reasons this has destroyed our well-being.


“Why did it happen? What had we done to somebody to cause this?” he asked. “I felt almost harassed.”


Mackinlay complained the police came to her door at 10.00pm and she was later questioned at Hammersmith Police Station after an officer pushed their ID through her letterbox.


She did not deny throwing urine from a plastic jug out of her front door, but insisted it was not aimed at her next-door neighbours and she did not intend any harassment.


“I have an arthritic knee and a collapsed vertebra and I cannot always get upstairs or downstairs to the toilet due to mobility issues,” she told the trial. 


Holding up the jug and referring to her belief the De Brauwere’s exaggerated the urine damage she announced to the magistrates: “This is the weapon of mass destruction.


“I wee in it and I dispose of it. I’m afraid to say I throw it out the front door.


“There is no malice. In my eighty-one years on earth I have never damaged anyone’s property and as a founding member of the Residents Association I feel I am a respected person in the area.”


Supported in court by her son and daughter Mackinlay added: “It is not very ladylike, I understand that and I like to think I am a bit more sophisticated.”


Regarding the estimate of damage she said: “That is laughable. No way is it thousands of pounds worth of damage, no way. I am surprised they are allowed to lie under oath, it was a whole lot of lies.”


Bench Chairman Jeffrey Manton announced: “These matters were harassment of the individuals and the criminal damage was reckless. This has been deeply distressing to the people living next door.”


Mackinlay was conditionally discharged for twelve months on the two harassment counts and ordered to pay £620 costs and a £26 surcharge.


She was also made subject to a twelve-month restraining order, prohibiting contact with the De Brauwere family.


Afterwards Alain said: “I don’t see it as a victory. It is a very sad day.”

Friday, 8 September 2023

NOT GUILTY: City Solicitor Cleared Of Dancefloor Punch

Not Guilty: Gush
A City lawyer, who insisted he was defending himself during a dance floor confrontation with an investment banker, has been cleared of GBH.

Property solicitor Barnaby Gush, 30, admitted throwing the punch that fractured the jaw of Jonathan Luke, 32, but said he was acting in self-defence.

At Inner London Crown Court he claimed the banker was drunk and making himself a nuisance at the Ned’s members-only basement Vault bar.


The trial heard Mr Luke aimed a foul-mouthed gay slur towards Gush - apparently due to the defendant’s flamboyant dancing - but he denied this and insisted he was not intoxicated or causing trouble.


After the week-long trial the jury today found property solicitor Gush, of The Merchant Building, Wharf Road, Angel, Islington, not guilty of inflicting grievous bodily harm on September 24, 2021.


The Newcastle University architecture graduate claimed Mr Luke shouted: “F*** off you little p***,” as he moved from group to group after midnight.


However, Loughborough University graduate Mr Luke - who needed two metal plates in his jaw - said he was no more than “reasonably tipsy during his company’s end-of-Summer night out.


Gush’s account was that Mr Luke twice bumped into him on the dance floor before moving aggressively towards him as the pair “squared up” in the early hours.


Mr Luke told the court his evening began at The Happenstance, near St. Paul’s Cathedral. “There was a free bar. It was a drinking event.”


After “two or three” beers, “one or two” glasses of wine, plus a shot his group continued drinking cocktails at the Ned, near the Bank of England.


“I was with colleagues and having a nice time and I remember feeling this punch at the bottom of my jaw from the right. It felt like a big, sudden impact, a shock,” he explained.

Punched: Jonathan Luke


“I was not braced for any impact and it was very sore. I felt a bit of a hole in my mouth and it was where the jaw had displaced.


“I hoped I could sleep it off, but the police called in the morning and suggested I should go to A&E.


“I could not swallow and two metal plates were put in to crack the lower jaw back into place.”


However, Gush’s lawyer Aisling Byrnes suggested: “You were very drunk that evening. Do you recall wandering around the dance floor going from group to group?”


Mr Luke denied this, but the lawyer added: “You were making a little bit of a nuisance of yourself on the dance floor. You made physical contact with Mr Gush while he was dancing and it is no dispute he hit you.


“He and his friend moved away and you backed into him harder than before while he was dancing.”


Mr Luke denied Gush’s account of events, insisting: “I didn’t really bump into anyone.”


He denied shouting the foul-mouthed gay slur. “Had you seen him dancing flamboyantly with his friends?” asked the lawyer.


Gush says he told Mr Luke: “Why do you keep bumping into me? Leave me alone.”


The court heard there was talk of “let’s go outside,” with Gush recalling telling the taller Mr Luke: “I’d rather you f*** off.”


The six-foot two inch banker denied moving towards the defendant with his right arm and shoulder at Gush’s “neck and chest height” moments before the blow.


Security staff intervened and called the police as Mr Luke, who had blood on his chin and shirt, was being attended to.


Prosecutor Lewis MacDonald told the jury Gush replied “no comment” when interviewed by police. 


“He now suggests he was acting in self-defence because he felt threatened by Mr Luke, but the complainant did not commit any act of violence and we say nothing justified the defendant punching him in the face with such force.


“Witnesses describe them on the dance floor squaring-up and Mr Gush punching Mr Luke in the face and is heard shouting: ‘Let’s take this outside,’ or: ‘Let’s have a fight.’


“Security  staff at The Ned immediately intervened and separated the men and called the police, waiting with Mr Gush until he was arrested.

Wednesday, 6 September 2023

Drill Rapper Russ Millions Banned For Driving BMW After Smoking Weed

Court Date: Millions
Chart-topping rapper Russ Millions was yesterday banned from driving his expensive first car after police caught him at the wheel while nearly three times the cannabis limit.

The 27 year-old, whose 2021 hit ‘Body’ was the first drill rap single to reach Number One had splashed out on a blue BMW X6 Series with his recording earnings.


His debut hit 2018’s ‘Gun Lean’ was the first of the genre to break the top ten and Millions’ video performance inspired a dance craze, particularly mimicked by football star Jesse Lingard.


Another motorist reported him to the police for allegedly cutting him up in south-east London and a policeman detected a strong smell of cannabis and Millions was arrested.


He appeared at Bromley Magistrates’ Court on Monday under his real name Shylo Millwood, where he was disqualified from driving for twelve months, fined £1,000, with £85 costs and ordered to pay a £400 surcharge.


Millions pleaded guilty to driving in Mottingham Road, Mottingham on March 1, with a THC cannabinol reading of 5.8 micrograms per litre of blood - the legal limit is 2.0.


He also pleaded guilty to driving in breach of his licence, namely without L-plates and driving without insurance.


“It was his first car and he took it out with a family member in his fifties and if he had L-plates he would have been fine,” said Colin Witcher, defending.


“The other vehicle’s driver pointed him out, claiming he had been cut up near the petrol station and it is correct Mr Millwood had consumed cannabis earlier that day.


“His mother is in court to support him and has taken the day off work and she has expressed her frustration at his behaviour.


“He was lining-up to have a driving test and had a nice new car, which his mother will now be driving exclusively. The car was to have given him the freedom he wanted.”


The court heard Deptford-born Millions, of Birdham Close, Bickley, Bromley draws down £1300 per week from his management accountants.


“As far as his family are concerned their attitude is ‘it’s your mess, you pay, you face the consequences.’


“It will have consequences,” added Mr Witcher. “He is not proud of it and wants to put it behind him.”


Prosecutor Sophie Young told the court it was 5.10pm when Millions was pointed-out to police by another motorist while behind the wheel of the BMW.


“He referred to an earlier incident and a police national computer check showed this defendant only had a provisional licence and was not displaying any L-plates.


“When the officer spoke to Mr Millwood there was a strong smell of cannabis and a roadside drugs swipe was requested.


“This was initially refused and he was arrested. He then consented to the test and it was returned positive.”


Blood test analysis later revealed the true cannabis reading.


Millions has previous convictions for possessing heroin and cannabis in 2016 and possessing cannabis in 2017, plus a record of failing to comply with court community orders.


District Judge Sarah Turnock told him: “You have pleaded guilty at the first opportunity and have pleaded guilty without the full papers being served on you, so are deserving of full credit.


“I am aware of the journey you were taking that day, but you have to display L-plates and be incredibly careful about insurance policies, which can be incredibly complicated.


“If you are still smoking cannabis you should know it remains in your system for a long time, it may even still be in your system for a week. 


“If this happens again within the next ten years the minimum disqualification will be three years.”


‘Body’ was also a number One in Australia, New Zealand and Ireland and Millions enjoyed a further top ten hit with Keisha & Becky’ in 2019.

Monday, 4 September 2023

City Lawyer Fractured Banker's Jaw At The Ned

Punch: Barnaby Gush

A City lawyer fractured a tipsy investment banker’s jaw with a single punch at the exclusive Ned nightspot during a dance floor confrontation, a court heard today.

Property solicitor Barnaby Gush, 30, claims Jonathan Luke, 32, - who needed two metal plates to repair his jaw - shouted the gay slur: “F*** off you little p***,” - due to his flamboyant dancing at the members-only basement Vault bar.


Loughborough University graduate Mr Luke denies he was drunk and aggressive during his company’s end-of-Summer night out, insisting he was nothing more than “reasonably tipsy.”


Gush, of The Merchant Building, Wharf Road, Angel, Islington - an architecture graduate from Newcastle University - has pleaded not guilty to one count of inflicting grievous bodily harm on September 24, 2021.


He admits striking out in self-defence, claiming Mr Luke twice bumped into him on the dance floor before moving aggressively towards him as the pair “squared up” in the early hours.


Mr Luke told Inner London Crown Court his evening began at The Happenstance, near St. Paul’s Cathedral. “There was a free bar. It was a drinking event.”


After “two or three” beers, “one or two” glasses of wine, plus a shot his group continued drinking cocktails at the Ned, near the Bank of England.


“I was with colleagues and having a nice time and I remember feeling this punch at the bottom of my jaw from the right. It felt like a big, sudden impact, a shock,” he explained.


“I was not braced for any impact and it was very sore. I felt a bit of a hole in my mouth and it was where the jaw had displaced.


“I hoped I could sleep it off, but the police called in the morning and suggested I should go to A&E.

Fractured Jaw: Jonathan Luke


“I could not swallow and two metal plates were put in to crack the lower jaw back into place.”


However, Gush’s lawyer Aisling Byrnes suggested: “You were very drunk that evening. Do you recall wandering around the dance floor going from group to group?”


Mr Luke denied this, but the lawyer added: “You were making a little bit of a nuisance of yourself on the dance floor. You made physical contact with Mr Gush while he was dancing and it is no dispute he hit you.


“He and his friend moved away and you backed into him harder than before while he was dancing.”


Mr Luke denied Gush’s account of events, insisting: “I didn’t really bump into anyone.”


He denied shouting the foul-mouthed gay slur. “Had you seen him dancing flamboyantly with his friends?” asked the lawyer.


Gush says he told Mr Luke: “Why do you keep bumping into me? Leave me alone.”


The court heard there was talk of “let’s go outside,” with Gush recalling telling the taller Mr Luke: “I’d rather you f*** off.”


The six-foot two inch banker denied moving towards the defendant with his right arm and shoulder at Gush’s “neck and chest height” moments before the blow.


Security staff intervened and called the police as Mr Luke, who had blood on his chin and shirt, was being attended to.


Prosecutor Lewis MacDonald told the jury Gush replied “no comment” when interviewed by police. 


“He now suggests he was acting in self-defence because he felt threatened by Mr Luke, but the complainant did not commit any act of violence and we say nothing justified the defendant punching him in the face with such force.


“Witnesses describe them on the dance floor squaring-up and Mr Gush punching Mr Luke in the face and is heard shouting: ‘Let’s take this outside,’ or: ‘Let’s have a fight.’


“Security  staff at The Ned immediately intervened and separated the men and called the police, waiting with Mr Gush until he was arrested.


Trial continues…..