Portsmouth News

Habitat for dormice was ‘destroyed’

£40,000 fine for luxury developer’s ‘flagrant’ disregard for protection

- By STEVE DEEKS Senior reporter steve.deeks@thenews.co.uk

A LUXURY developer selling homes to the ‘most discerning clients’ has been slapped with a £40,000 fine for destroying a dormice habitat.

Portsmouth Crown Court heard Knightsgat­e UK Ltd spent more than £1m on land at Botley Road, Swanwick, with plans already greenlit for six homes to be built.

But the developer tasked a tree surgeon with clearing the land with a digger and in a bonfire despite planning permission insisting dormice habitats must be protected.

The court heard reptile habitats were also destroyed by Knightsgat­e – a firm with a turnover of around £15m that currently owes HMRC £1m which it is seeking to pay back.

Mitigation measures costing just over £69,000 were also supposed to be put in place following the destructio­n of the site as there were seven nests and young dormice living in hedgerow and shrubbery.

At the sentence hearing, Knightsgat­e was also given a confiscati­on order to pay back £69,392.80 it gained from destroying the land rather than following the environmen­tal mitigation measures.

Judge Timothy Mousley QC said: ‘It was a deliberate offence – it was flagrant and blatant. I find that Knightsgat­e was fully aware of the land habitat for a protected species including dormice.

‘(The destructio­n) had a long-lasting effect on animal health and life and longlastin­g effect on biodiversi­ty.’

He added: ‘There is a national decreasing habitat for dormice and the actions of the defendant company had an affect on more than one species.

‘It was to be a significan­t developmen­t of size on an area of land that was substantia­l.’

Prosecutor Amy Oliver had asked the judge to consider if the firm acted in a way ‘worse than negligence’ following the ‘speed with which the work was carried out following the sale’.

Richard Heller, for Knightsgat­e, argued his client is a ‘large reputable company’ and added the crime was not carried out for financial gain or deliberate­ly.

Mr Heller said the clearing was ‘an error’ and as a result of the order to clear the land being ‘given prematurel­y’.

Previous land owner Foreman Homes – which was not involved in the court case – won planning permission from Fareham Borough

Council for six homes at 112 Botley Road in January 2019.

The site was then sold two months later to Knightsgat­e, and on March 14 the worker was asked to clear the land.

The court heard Knightsgat­e has developed 27 sites in Hampshire, building 109 properties – with some of those under shared ownership.

Sam Heathorn, chief executive and founder, boasts on its website the firm will ‘go the extra mile’.

Knightsgat­e UK Ltd admitted damaging or destroying a resting place of a wild animal of a European protected species – dormice.

Mark Gammon, CPS Wessex senior crown prosecutor and wildlife lead, said: ‘Dormice are a legally protected species whose population­s have undergone a severe decrease in the UK over the last century.

‘This is due, in part at least, to the destructio­n of their habitats and resting places for the purposes of developmen­t.

‘Knightsgat­e UK Ltd completely disregarde­d the advice they had been given and destroyed the dormouse habitat entirely. Destroying or damaging the habitat of protected species is a criminal offence that we will always seek to prosecute where there is evidence of it.’

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? DELIBERATE Developer Knightsgat­e UK allowed the habitat of the dormouse on land at Botley Road, Swanwick, to be destroyed
DELIBERATE Developer Knightsgat­e UK allowed the habitat of the dormouse on land at Botley Road, Swanwick, to be destroyed

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom