Late Wine Orders Leads To Recovering Alcoholic  Being Accused Of Drug Dealing

Late Wine Orders Leads To Recovering Alcoholic Being Accused Of Drug Dealing

By Gabriel Princewill-

A recovering alcoholic was falsely accused of drug dealing after worried neighbours observed his door being left open, and mistook late wine order on an almost daily basis to be drug dealing.

Essex police and Social Services contacted The Eye Of Media.Com after they discovered that our organisation had arranged his move to the property in which he resides following an impending eviction at his last residence caused by drunken conduct and  perpetual anti-social behaviour.

Special arrangements had been made by our organisation for mr.Hustwitt’s new landlord to bypass the usual rigid reference vetting requirements before tenants are allowed to move into their property. This arrangement was made in order afford him a new life devoid of the delinquent characters exacerbating his already troubled mind.

The discovery that mr. Hustwitt had been left out of his father’s will had snowballed into a spell of deep depression and boundless drinking which appeared to be killing the sorrowful man. However, he was back to old ground after neighbours were insistent that something untoward was going on at his new place.

CARPET CLEANER

Gary Hustwitt from Hockley called a carpet cleaner to clean his bedroom carpet after it was stained with vomit and faeces caused by excessive drinking aggravated by the absence of regular food during a one week period in which he was alone and depressed.

The 59 year old depressed alcoholic confessed to have been drinking four bottles of red wine a day and about four cans of strong polish beers, all of which had been a catalyst to a chaotic state of disorder in his room.  One of the stipulated  conditions of his move to the new property had been his co-operation to progressively reduce his alcohol intake, the eventual goal being to eliminate it from his consumption totally.

When informed about a periodic spot check  scheduled for the next day from estate agents Appointmore, mr Hustwitt made the sudden arrangements to have the carpet cleaned up to evade detection, but his neighbours who claimed to be alarmed by the noise and the smell made an emergency call to the estate agents.

SUSPICIOUS

Neighbours told the estate agents they were suspicious drug dealing might be occurring at his address because they noticed his front door often unlocked, and individuals going in and out from his apartment. Mr. Hustwitt insists that the only individuals, apart from representatives of The Eye Of Media.Com that have attended his property are delivery men and women who supplied his wine and other consumption goods and amenities he orders online. However, police have visited his property twice to investigate the allegations. Hustwitt said:

”This is ridiculous, I think the neighbours here are demented. Whose business is it if I leave my front door open? There has never been any drug dealing going on here, they are talking nonesense! The £15,000 a year apartment is furnished with CCTV cameras both outside and inside the secluded building of the property .

Gary was moved to a sophisticated part of Chalkwell, whose location we cannot disclosed because of exploitative drug addicts he became acquainted to in an ill judged attempt to fill in the void of loneliness. Over a two year period in which he fell in love with a crack addict, he recklessly frittered away £25,000 in both cash and material belongings, to meet the demands of a selfish 30 year old addict who misled him into believing she loved him.

The realisation his love was not reciprocated by the selfish and manipulative lady turned him into hopeless wreck in dire need of refuge. Once notified, The Eye Of Media.Com infiltrated the unsavoury circle of friends and successfully banned them from his property when we began to take pictures of them. In collaboration with his family whom we got in touch with, accommodation was arranged for him under a broader plan aimed at addressing his alcoholism.

DEPRESSION SPELL

After undergoing a dreadful spell of depression aggravated by both depression, anxiety, and sorrow, the former IT engineer had feared to himself be dying . The 59 year old who lost his stock broker father was frozen out of his will estimated to be over a £1m, had been plunged into an utter state of despair and helplessness.

Mr Hustwitt also hasa long history of alcohol dependency, culminating in several thousands of pounds spent by his family on detox clinics, all to no avail. His situation was so bad that his sister had a copy of his picture posted on almost every corner shop in Hockley, urging shop keepers not to serve her brother, whose drinking problem was becoming a nightmare for his respectable family.

Undeterred, Gary always sought alternative ways to purchase alcohol, including ordering drinks online and travelling out of his area just to purchase alcohol. Following a fall out with his parents of her crippling habit, the stubborn beer lover fell out with each of his parents, allegedly uttering hurtful words to them before their demise.

WILL

The pain of being frozen out from his father’s will was so daunting, he became bedfast due to chronic alcohol consumption that saw him down between nine and eleven cans of larger on a daily basis. Having crossed paths with our organisation a few years earlier, we were contacted to intervene in his situation as his last hope.

Upon discovery that he was being evicted from his home because of the spate of anti-social behaviour reported in his property that led neighbours to complain about him on a regular basis, we decided to step in. Extensive discussions with his family took place, after which an agreement was made for him to be provided accommodation on the promise that he would subsequently curb his drinking.   Mr.Hustwitt fluctuated in his commitment to fulfil his obligation.

TRANSITION

The transition to a new accommodation was intended to represent a fresh start, but a similar pattern of complaint appears to be emerging. This time it is the noise of a loud vacuum cleaner emitting a foul odour that has sparked the alarm. Neighbours are pressurising the estate agents to put mr. Hustwitt on the streets and have put in for a section 8.

Head Of Sales at Appointmore: Lauren said: ” something is not right about all this, there are too many complaints and I am not happy about it. Gary needs to stop whatever he is doing. His situation is currently under review, we are awaiting a report from social services, after which the landlady will decide whether he stays at the property or not”.

DISCIPLINE

He has since submitted himself to a much more disciplined restraint from alcohol, restricting his drinking to just weekends. A family member of his who insisted on anonymity said: ” the problem with Gary is that he just does not accept he has to completely give up drinking. We have been through this road with him several times and have had enough”.

Spread the news