….She said: “A couple of the girls involved seemed to think the whole thing was funny, but when I explained what was happening to me some of them appeared genuinely sorry.â€
Mrs Messenger was full of praise for the police and for Allerdale council’s Adrian Braniff, who organises the community payback scheme and arranged for offenders to repaint Mrs Messenger’s walls that had been drawn on.
….“I have had graffiti painted on my wall. The cladding has been kicked off. On one occasion my satellite cable was ripped off the wall along with 18 others in the street.
“Cars have their wing mirrors pulled off and windscreens smashed.
“There is a constant noise from footballs or shoes kicking our wall.
“I am trying to provide a nice home for my daughter and to protect her from some of the things that are happening, but she can’t sleep at night for the noise and the worry. Our lives have become hell.
“I have been renovating the house but that work has almost stopped because I am always having to pay to fix the results of their vandalism – £450 for a new drain pipe, £160 to have my Sky satellite cable fixed and it goes on.â€
Now four Maryport town councillors have taken up her case.
Councillors Richard Taylor, Martin and Janice Wood and Keith Little have undertaken to find a way for gates to be fitted, either through the Crime and Disorder Reduction Partnership or through Cumbria County Council.
Your donation helps Prison Fellowship International repair the harm caused by crime by emphasizing accountability, forgiveness, and making amends for prisoners and those affected by their actions. When victims, offenders, and community members meet to decide how to do that, the results are transformational.
Donate Now