Builder In Court After £4m New Homes Destroyed With Digger

Several buildings were wrecked in the rampage.
LOADINGERROR LOADING

A builder accused of using a digger to cause millions of pounds worth of damage to a row of newly built retirement homes has appeared in court.

Daniel Neagu, 30, was charged with criminal damage after five McCarthy and Stone homes worth approximately £800,000 each were allegedly wrecked in Buntingford, Hertfordshire.

Neagu, who had performed work for the firm, did not enter a plea during the hearing at Hatfield magistrates court, where he appeared via videolink from police cells on Monday.

Sitting on an estate still under construction, the homes in Ermine Street had external walls torn out, leaving debris littering their gardens. A turquoise digger stood beside the devastation.

A digger remains stationary at the scene of the incident.
A digger remains stationary at the scene of the incident.
PA Wire/PA Images
Damaged properties in a row of newly-built retirement homes in Ermine Street, Buntingford.
Damaged properties in a row of newly-built retirement homes in Ermine Street, Buntingford.
PA Wire/PA Images
The damage looks set to top £4 million.
The damage looks set to top £4 million.
PA Wire/PA Images

McCarthy and Stone said owners were due to move into the unoccupied bungalows within weeks.

Hertfordshire Constabulary said officers arrested a man at the scene after being called at about 5.40pm on Saturday.

The Romanian national living in Athelstone Road, Harrow, north-west London, was not employed directly by McCarthy and Stone and was instead working for subcontractor Fenton, the McCarthy and Stone spokeswoman said.

“We are now awaiting a structural engineer’s report, so we can plan the work required to repair or rebuild these properties,” she added

“We are absolutely devastated for the purchasers affected and our priority is to continue to stay in close contact with them and their families, and to ensure that any disruption is kept to a minimum.”

Neagu, who spoke in court only to give his particulars and state his desire not to enter a plea yet, was charged with one count of criminal damage to the value of £4 million on five houses belonging to McCarthy and Stone.

He was remanded in custody to enter a plea at St Albans Crown Court on September 10.

Close

What's Hot