The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Farming sleuth tracks fly-tipped kitchen to recently-sold house

Angry farmer gets on the case after rubbish is dumped at the entrance to one of his fields

- GRAHAM BROWN gbrown@thecourier.co.uk

An Angus farmer turned detective and traced a kitchen that had been dumped on his land to a property listing on a local solicitor’s website.

Norman Ogg was furious to find kitchen flooring, cabinets and tiles at the entrance to one of his fields this summer.

It was the latest in a series of dumping incidents to hit the Burnside estate near Forfar but this time the offenders had left a crucial piece of evidence behind.

An online search of an address label found in the rubbish led Mr Ogg to a property website where the Carnoustie house had been recently advertised – complete with photograph­s of the kitchen left lying on the land.

Mr Ogg is now locked in a dispute with the new owner of the house to recover hundreds of pounds in clean-up costs and has criticised Angus Council for failing to swiftly pursue the crime.

The householde­r has not denied the kitchen came from his property but has been unable to provide details of the “man with a van” he found on Facebook and paid to take the rubbish away.

Mr Ogg said: “Fly-tipping is a huge problem for farmers all over and we are always left to pick up the bill because it is on private land.

“This man hasn’t denied it came from his house, and I’ve since spoken to another farmer from near Carnoustie who had stuff from the utility room from the same house dumped on his land.

“The council repeatedly ask people to report fly-tipping to try to help them track down the culprits, yet when you give them everything they need they still do nothing.

“There are often no clues or any proof, but this is an opportunit­y for them to take up a genuine case and get the message out there that they will take action on fly-tipping.

“I am fuming that the council are doing nothing about this when they were presented with all the informatio­n they needed so soon after it happened,” he added.

The householde­r did not want to comment on the issue due to the prospect of it becoming a legal matter.

Angus Council was also reluctant to weigh in.

A spokesman said: “As this matter is subject to an ongoing investigat­ion it is not appropriat­e to comment further at this time.”

“Fly-tipping is a huge problem for farmers all over and we are always left to pick up the bill. FARMER NORMAN OGG

 ??  ?? Farmer Norman Ogg traced the kitchen dumped on land near Forfar to a house in Carnoustie.
Farmer Norman Ogg traced the kitchen dumped on land near Forfar to a house in Carnoustie.

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