Banned agency director ordered to pay £80,000 for unlicensed HMO

A letting agency in the inner London area of Camden, whose sole director was recently made the subject of an anti-social behaviour injunction and banning order, has been ordered to pay £80,000 plus legal costs.

The landlord of the Camden property was also found guilty and sentenced for controlling an unlicensed House in Multiple Occupation (HMO) in the borough and providing unsafe housing for its tenants.

Mohammed Ali Abbas Rasool, 29, sole director of Blackstone Vertu Limited, and landlord and owner of the HMO, Asrah Rasool, were found guilty at Highbury Corner Magistrates’ Court and sentenced for operating an unlicensed HMO at 11 Soane Court, St Pancras Way, London NW1 and breaches of HMO management regulations. The judge fined them £80,000 and £40,000 respectively and ordered them to pay almost £15,000 in legal costs.

The Council had received a complaint in August 2020 from previous tenants of the property, complaining about its condition.

Investigations by the Council’s HMO Enforcement Team found that the property was occupied as an unlicensed HMO and was managed by Blackstone Vertu Limited.

The property was over-occupied, with seven tenants in five rooms, and was in a poor condition throughout, with significant fire safety hazards – including a lack of any working fire alarms or fire doors – posing a serious risk to the tenants.

Mr Rasool and a different company of which he was the director, had previously been prosecuted for similar offences.

The council has recently obtained a banning order against Mr Rasool and various of his associates, which now prevents them from managing or being involved in the letting of any properties in England for five years.

Camden Council has now registered over 46 enforcement cases on the Mayor of London’s Rogue Landlord Checker, secured the capital’s first ever rogue landlord banning order, and three of only four landlord banning orders issued in London.

Meric Apak
Cllr Meric Apak

Cllr Meric Apak, cabinet member for Better Homes, commented: “Around a third of Camden residents rent from private landlords and they deserve to live in properly regulated, safe homes and to be treated fairly. The pandemic further highlighted the importance of the right to a home that is safe and secure.

“Most landlords are decent law-abiding people; however, for too long a minority have been able to let housing that is unsuitable while exploiting their tenants and woefully disregarding their wellbeing and safety.

“Our HMO licensing scheme and HMO enforcement team are continuing to improve standards in Camden’s private housing sector, empowering renters to take action and helping good landlords to run successful businesses.

“The legal action taken in this case was a necessary last resort. Our message to landlords and letting agents is that we are here to work with you, to provide advice and assistance first of all, and to ensure you can meet your obligations.”

 

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One Comment

  1. Woodentop

    So enforcement can work after all. So why the continued rhetoric that landlords and agents are demonised with need for extra controls on licensing that will fix things? It is nothing but empire building and money spinning adventure into councils pockets.

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