The DU Lounge
Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsMore entitled assholes
A few months ago I posted this story about some guy on Nantucket illegally cutting down his neighbors trees to get a better view of the ocean.
https://www.democraticunderground.com/10182200239
I wonder if these folks are related to him?
Stephen Antonson, a painter and sculptor, and his wife, Kathleen Hackett, an interior designer and author, bought the $320,000 home in Rockport in 2017. They immediately began asking their neighbor, Ruth Graham, a widow who was pushing 90 at the time, to remove trees in her garden which would have given them a stunning view of Penobscot Bay.
Graham refused but the couple allegedly persisted, at one point sending her a handwritten note ostensibly from their teenage children begging her to sell them the land. She once again declined, but the following year in 2021, she began to note that her trees were dying, according to reporting from The New York Times.
An investigation was launched which revealed the trees were killed by 'herbicidal poison'. The poisoning's impact was, 'limited to a distinct corridor of trees directly in line with the deck of the Antonson residence', according to a report from the Maine Board of Pesticides Control.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-15094753/new-york-couple-accused-poisoning-trees-elderly-woman-rockport-maine.html#

Wonder Why
(6,184 posts)moniss
(8,046 posts)where a belligerent neighbor moved barbed wire fencing from his side of a line of trees to the other side and then claimed it was the property line and therefore the trees were on his side. Also in the past it has not been unusual for people to move surveyor stakes to whatever they pleased. A great many of the old farms in the Midwest would have fences that had been in place for many decades but were not actually on the property line. Sometimes by several feet or more. Unless somebody pays for a certified survey at some point the fence lines just become more or less accepted as property lines.