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Nottingham Post
Nottingham Post
World
Joshua Hartley

Man who threatened to kill police with axe and chainsaw warned he could lose Mansfield Woodhouse home


A man who used a chainsaw to threaten police officers after he said he would blow up his bungalow has been warned by a court that he could face eviction. Mansfield District Council sought a possession order last month after Paul Allsop, 52, of Chestnut Grove, Mansfield Woodhouse, was arrested on September 27, 2020, for wielding an axe and chainsaw, damaging a door and making threats to kill police officers.

He was sentenced at Nottingham Magistrates' Court on January 7, 2021, over the incident after pleading guilty at an earlier hearing in November 2020 to causing criminal damage to the door of his council bungalow. He also admitted to using or threatening unlawful violence and was sentenced to a 16-week prison sentence, suspended for 12 months, ordered to pay £600 compensation to Mansfield District Council and was given a 12-month community order to include 15 rehabilitation activity requirement days.

The court also ordered that his axe and chainsaw be destroyed. The court heard that Allsop destroyed his own front door because he was angry that police had turned up at his home to switch off his gas supply after he threatened to blow up his home.

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Before Allsop was convicted of the criminal damage charge and threatening police, the council had applied to the County Court, in Mansfield, on October 15 2020 for an interim injunction against him. It was built up to a full injunction on November 13 2020 and laid down various conditions to prevent Allsop from engaging in anti-social behaviour.

On March 11 last year at Nottingham County Court, Allsop admitted two breaches of the injunction and was given a three-week prison sentence, suspended until the expiry of the council’s injunction on October 7, 2021.

Following this case, the council served a notice on Allsop on March 24, 2021, warning him that it was seeking possession of his home for breaches to the injunction. Various legal procedures delayed the hearing until May 18 when Nottingham County Court granted the council a possession order, suspended for five years.

If he breaks any conditions of this suspended possession order at any time in the next five years, the council may seek to pursue eviction action. After the case, Cllr Marion Bradshaw, portfolio holder for safer communities, housing and wellbeing, said: "This has been a difficult and complicated set of proceedings against this tenant.

“We and the court recognise that this suspended possession order strikes a balance between sanctions to ensure Paul Allsop lives in a manner that is co-operative and which deters behaviour likely to cause alarm or distress to his neighbours, whilst allowing him one final chance to keep a roof over his head. We remain determined, however, to ensure he sticks to the conditions of this possession order and, if he doesn't, the council may have no alternative but to pursue further action to evict him."

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