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Makes me glad my nearest neighbor is a half mile away. 

 

http://news.yahoo.com/one-man-...news-topstories.html

 

Homeowners on Fairley Road in Ross Township, Pennsylvania, say their neighbor Bill Ansell is terrorizing them year round with his hostile anti-Christmas spirit.

 

“Any opportunity he has to make our life a hardship, he does,” resident Chris Hebda told ABC News' “20/20.”

“He's an angry person that's very unstable,” resident Pamela Heck told “20/20.”

 

Ansell, an electrician, has a display on his yard that features a beheaded choir, a hanging Mickey Mouse and even a urinating Santa Claus that lights up at night.

 

Neighbors Chris and Joanne Hebda said they have had to stare at the unpleasant decorations for the past six years. Fairley Road is a unique cul-de-sac; a circular street with Ansell's house right in the middle, surrounded by six other homes. That makes it hard to avoid his handiwork.

“There was a Virgin Mary here, and he placed a knife through her head, right there on the edge of our driveway,” Joanne Hebda told “20/20.” “I thought it was a terroristic threat.”

To make matters worse, his neighbors said, Ansell also tacked up profane signs all over his house attacking the township and neighbors personally.

 

 

The worst sign, the neighbors said, included disparaging remarks about neighbor Tom White's late wife, posted the day after she died.

“Why would somebody even do that?” White told “20/20.”

One sign on Ansell's home may offer a clue as to why. It says, “This display is dedicated to Ross Township. Shame on you for destroying my display that brought so much joy and happiness to so many people.”

Years ago, Ansell's home was known for its lustrous lights and dazzling display that attracted many onlookers.

But one Thanksgiving, Ansell's neighbor Pamela Heck was so blinded by the lights that she asked him to turn them off while her family had dinner.

“It was very unpleasant between us after that,” Heck told “20/20.”

From that minor dispute grew a war, according to neighbors. At night, they say he blasts floodlights into their windows.

“It'll be 3 o'clock in the morning, and all of the sudden you'll hear bang, bang, bang,” Jay Londino told “20/20.” “And he's underneath a tarp with a sledgehammer, hammering in the middle of the night to wake up the entire neighborhood.”

 

 

They all feel trapped. Friends and family won't visit them, and worst of all, they can't sell their homes.

“You're a prisoner on your own street right now. It may come down to just leave the house empty and move,” White said.

Ansell wouldn't speak to “20/20,” but two years ago, he told Pittsburgh's WPXI-TV, “I used to have a beautiful Christmas display, they hated it. This is my display now. I don't think it's against the law to exercise your right to have your own display.”

The Fairley Road homeowners say they are at their wits end. They have repeatedly called police and complained to the township Board of Commissioners, but so far say they have seen little done. Ross Township has fined Ansell for local code violations, and in a statement to "20/20," the Ross Township said they have "taken and will continue to take appropriate legal action."

“The Township has taken and will continue to take appropriate legal action,” said Grant Montgomery, president of the Ross Board of Commissioners, in a statement to ABC News.

In August 2014, the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, upheld a court order requiring Bill Ansell to clean up his yard and take down the vulgar signs.

To date, Ansell has not complied and township officials won’t say if and how it will enforce the order.

The Hebdas said they have repeatedly complained to the township Board of Commissioners, but so far haven't seen anything done. The lack of action is what frustrates the neighbors most.

For years, Ross Township has done nothing more than fine Ansell for the debris and signs on his property. But, he has not paid any of those citations. There is currently a 6-month-old court order demanding that he clean up his yard, which he has also ignored.

The local government won't say how it will specifically enforce the rules, and the Hebdas aren't waiting around to find out and will be renting their home out for much less than it should be.

“It's a move for, you know, for our lives ... to have normalcy again,” Joanne Hebda said.

“I had to cash in my retirement. There's no hope here in some ways, and there's no one to help us,” said Chris Hebda.


__________________________________

"Words have no power to impress the mind without the exquisite horror of their reality." Edgar Allan Poe.

Last edited by Seven
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He actually sounds insane and possibly a danger to others. I won't say danger to himself, because I have never really understood why anyone would care what a mean pos does to themselves. What's the expression? "One less smelly ******* in the world"? But they do need to be watched so they can't do harm to others. I understand how someone may have differences with their neighbors even though we've been lucky to never have such trouble, but to ruin your own property out of such spite makes no sense. I believe too, if the neighbors had just ignored it he wouldn't have kept it up. They're feeding his insane ***.

Some people complain about everything.  They didn't like his decorations when they were pretty, and now they don't like them when they aren't. 

 

Poor woman had to "stare" at those decorations for the last six years.  I live on a cul-de-sac, and if the neighbors put up any decorations at all, I might have to glance at them once or twice a day. 

 

Don't like light coming in - put up some blinds.

But one Thanksgiving, Ansell's neighbor Pamela Heck was so blinded by the lights that she asked him to turn them off while her family had dinner.

“It was very unpleasant between us after that,” Heck told “20/20.”

From that minor dispute grew a war, according to neighbors. At night, they say he blasts floodlights into their windows.

“It'll be 3 o'clock in the morning, and all of the sudden you'll hear bang, bang, bang,” Jay Londino told “20/20.” “And he's underneath a tarp with a sledgehammer, hammering in the middle of the night to wake up the entire neighborhood.”

 

To make matters worse, his neighbors said, Ansell also tacked up profane signs all over his house attacking the township and neighbors personally. The worst sign, the neighbors said, included disparaging remarks about neighbor Tom White's late wife, posted the day after she died.

“Why would somebody even do that?” White told “20/20.”

 

So, you don't think the man is a little unhinged and possibly dangerous? 

Last edited by Seven

I wish I could find the video of the guy in St. Florian that hadn't mowed his yard in a year.  He worked 18 hour days and his mower had been broken.  His neighbors gave him grief and eventually called the news (WAFF) to get some action.  The news team showed up, did an interview, and as they were about to leave, the neighbors came up and started assaulting the guy.  On camera. 

 

Without knowing how a request to turn his lights off for Thanksgiving dinner turned into a neighborhood war, I don't know who the crazy party is, him or the neighbors. 

 

Unhinged?  Maybe.  Maybe his neighbors drove him to it.

 

Dangerous?  I doubt it.  It's been going on for six years.  If he were dangerous, he probably would have done something more aggressive and harmful than putting up disturbing yard decor.

 

I'd like to know the whole story before I condemned him.

 

Another story I saw comes to mind.  A bunch of neighbors complained about one house where the couple that owned the house would have sex in front of their open window (curtains open, not the window itself).  The neighbors were outraged and called the news.  It turns out, that to see into the window, the neighbors had to look over a 10 foot fence.  The neighbors gained proof of their accusations by holding a camera at arms length over their head, and pointing it down at the window in question in order to clear the fence.  So, to see into the window, they had to be peeping Toms. 

 

In my mind, the best neighbors are the ones that mind their own business, and not everyone else's.

Last edited by CrustyMac

Dangerous?  I doubt it.  It's been going on for six years.  If he were dangerous, he probably would have done something more aggressive and harmful than putting up disturbing yard decor.

 

I'd like to know the whole story before I condemned him

 

 

Possibly a danger. Meaning if he was confronted, or thought he was being confronted could one day just snap and hurt someone. Anyone that defaces their own property out of spite is not wound that tight to begin with. Story, neighbors at war for years over a shared drive/little road leading to their houses. After all those years  it ends in one neighbor killing the other. I couldn't see any problem at all with the shared drive way. Thousands of stories of neighbors killing each other over "nothing". I don't get it, the burning desire to get at/harm someone over what actually amounts to nothing.

Originally Posted by CrustyMac:

Yeah, Best, but everyone walking down the street is possibly a danger.  And I did say I "doubt" it. 

 

Hang in there.

==================

And I doubt every person walking down the street is defacing his/her own property, posting signs about dead neighbors, or acting spiteful in other ways. You hang in there too.

Last edited by Bestworking

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