Log in

View Full Version : Christmas squatter is jailed for six months



fionntan
29th December 2010, 15:49
29 December 2010 Last updated at 13:56
Share this page


Facebook (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-12088871#facebook)
Twitter (http://twitter.com/home?status=BBC+News+-+Christmas+squatter+is+jailed+for+six+months+http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-12088871)
Share (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-12088871#)
Email (http://newsvote.bbc.co.uk/mpapps/pagetools/email/www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-12088871)
Print (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-12088871?print=true)

Christmas squatter is jailed for six months

http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/50606000/jpg/_50606362_scalestatue203.jpg
A homeless man who squatted in a Belfast apartment over Christmas to escape the freezing weather has been jailed for six months.
Robert Lewandowski, 29, used keys he had stolen weeks earlier to move into the south Belfast flat once a woman who lived there left for the holidays.
The Polish national was said to have taken nothing during a four-day stay.
Belfast Magistrates Court heard the woman who lived in the flat and the police were sympathetic to his plight.
He used a stove, watched television and cleaned up after himself.
Lewandowski pleaded guilty to theft and wrongfully taking possession of the property at Tates Avenue between December 24 and 28.
Belfast Magistrates' Court heard on Wednesday that he had been sleeping in apartment block communal areas after losing his home and job earlier this year.
'Stole keys'
He stole the keys after spotting the door to the flat lying open and went in after a party on 5 December.
A lawyer for Lewandowski, of no fixed address, said he had left the property exactly as he found it.
He told the court that when the woman and her partner returned to find him there the defendant did not try to leave.
The solicitor said his client was apologetic, but had only gone in on Christmas Eve when temperatures were down to -10C.
"He let himself in to keep out of the cold. For four days he used the TV and stove to heat some food," he said.
"He didn't take anything, and he had four days and ample opportunity to effectively clean the place out," the solicitor added.
But after Lewandowski waived his right to a pre-sentence report, the district judge said his theft and wrongful entry was without justification.
He was jailed for two terms of six months each to run cocurrently.
He also agreed to fix bail pending a planned appeal, although Lewandowski was not released as he had no suitable address

fionntan
29th December 2010, 15:50
Justice :crying: i think not...

crazyirish93
29th December 2010, 15:53
thats justice right there:mad:

Rafiq
29th December 2010, 15:54
Yeah, it's easy to put homeless people in prison, cowards.

ÑóẊîöʼn
29th December 2010, 16:23
Something's fishy.

I'm not entirely sure how the law works in NI, but in England and Wales at least, such a situation would at first blush be an entirely civil matter and therefore entirely up to the property owner to pursue.

Now, it says the homeless man "did not try to leave." But that is such elliptical language that it could mean anything, from him being a little too slow to leave the door to him kicking up enough of a fuss where the homeowners felt threatened and ended up calling the police.

Judging by the vague language used (most likely on legal advice), the man probably acted unwisely, yet at the same time the whole legal process seems to have been unusually swift here - perhaps this man is a victim of some kind of "anti-squatter" legislation.

Perhaps comrades in NI can shed some light on this?

Political_Chucky
29th December 2010, 20:58
Im not saying the homeless man would prefer one or the other or whether its right, but wouldn't jail for 6 months be a bit better then being homeless?

ÑóẊîöʼn
29th December 2010, 21:24
Im not saying the homeless man would prefer one or the other or whether its right, but wouldn't jail for 6 months be a bit better then being homeless?

Depends on the jails, I suppose.

gorillafuck
29th December 2010, 21:25
Im not saying the homeless man would prefer one or the other or whether its right, but wouldn't jail for 6 months be a bit better then being homeless?
It's sickening that those are the options

Palingenisis
29th December 2010, 21:29
It's sickening that those are the options

I dont know about normal jails in the north but given the choice between Mountjoy Prison and homelessnes I would choose homelessness.

Iraultzaile Ezkerreko
29th December 2010, 22:03
Is it difficult for the homeless to find temporary shelter and/or food in NI? I know here in Atlanta, the few support services done by churches and the Catholic Workers are woefully inadequate, and one of the biggest non-religious homeless shelters is being evicted via eminent domain to "increase the character of the neighborhood" or some other bullshit gentrification argument.

Political_Chucky
30th December 2010, 00:12
Philanchez: I don't know the situation out in NI, but here in bad ol' southern Cali, its ridiculous. On the mainstreet by my house, there has to be a new homeless man or woman begging for change everyday. I don't know where they are coming from, but I don't see much of any action trying to help them.

I was considering volunteering for a homeless shelter or something in that nature, but I can't find crap. The only programs I could find was this strike force to help homeless people by driving around and "helping" them? I don't know how or what they do, but its a government based job and I don't feel comfortable working with it.

Sensible Socialist
30th December 2010, 00:17
No one should ever die by following the law. Forcing someone to stay out in freezing temperatures is torture and a death sentence in many cases.

I'd love to see the homeless take up residence in Trump Towers.

Iraultzaile Ezkerreko
30th December 2010, 00:48
Philanchez: I don't know the situation out in NI, but here in bad ol' southern Cali, its ridiculous. On the mainstreet by my house, there has to be a new homeless man or woman begging for change everyday. I don't know where they are coming from, but I don't see much of any action trying to help them.

I was considering volunteering for a homeless shelter or something in that nature, but I can't find crap. The only programs I could find was this strike force to help homeless people by driving around and "helping" them? I don't know how or what they do, but its a government based job and I don't feel comfortable working with it.

That sounds much worse than here. The IAC and its WWP cadre have been leading the fight defending one of the biggest shelters in the city from eminent domain to the point where it is essentially being squatted. It's been an interesting fight. We do have quite the problem with homelessness though and very few people seem to focus any, if at all, on it. Sad, but I expect situations like the one in NI to become much more common as austerity goes into full swing.

twindragon
7th August 2011, 04:38
You have got to b kidding.Freedom is above all so much better then jail. You must not have had to spend any time in jail. Jails are degrading, keep u from family,friends,etc and r meant to break u mentally emotionaly and spirirtiually.